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Scanning electron microscopy adhesion

Perhaps the most significant complication in the interpretation of nanoscale adhesion and mechanical properties measurements is the fact that the contact sizes are below the optical limit ( 1 t,im). Macroscopic adhesion studies and mechanical property measurements often rely on optical observations of the contact, and many of the contact mechanics models are formulated around direct measurement of the contact area or radius as a function of experimentally controlled parameters, such as load or displacement. In studies of colloids, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has been used to view particle/surface contact sizes from the side to measure contact radius [3]. However, such a configuration is not easily employed in AFM and nanoindentation studies, and undesirable surface interactions from charging or contamination may arise. For adhesion studies (e.g. Johnson-Kendall-Roberts (JKR) [4] and probe-tack tests [5,6]), the probe/sample contact area is monitored as a function of load or displacement. This allows evaluation of load/area or even stress/strain response [7] as well as comparison to and development of contact mechanics theories. Area measurements are also important in traditional indentation experiments, where hardness is determined by measuring the residual contact area of the deformation optically [8J. For micro- and nanoscale studies, the dimensions of both the contact and residual deformation (if any) are below the optical limit. [Pg.194]

Figure 3.3. Scanning electron microscopy images of spherical pellets of budesonide (upper photograph) and of an adhesive mixture of lactose and micronized salbutamol (lower photograph). Figure 3.3. Scanning electron microscopy images of spherical pellets of budesonide (upper photograph) and of an adhesive mixture of lactose and micronized salbutamol (lower photograph).
G. Almahbobi, Adhesion of intermediate filaments and lipid droplets in adrenal cells studied by field emission scanning electron microscopy. Cell. Tissue Res.,... [Pg.310]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.58 , Pg.201 ]




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