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Scattering microscopic

A beautiful and elegant example of the intricacies of surface science is the formation of transparent, thermodynamically stable microemulsions. Discovered about 50 years ago by Winsor [76] and characterized by Schulman [77, 78], microemulsions display a variety of useful and interesting properties that have generated much interest in the past decade. Early formulations, still under study today, involve the use of a long-chain alcohol as a cosurfactant to stabilize oil droplets 10-50 nm in diameter. Although transparent to the naked eye, microemulsions are readily characterized by a variety of scattering, microscopic, and spectroscopic techniques, described below. [Pg.516]

Hashimoto, M., and Araki, T. 1999. Coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscope. Proc. 5P/ 3749 496. [Pg.70]

Fig. 5.3 Schematic illustration of a fs-laser-based hyper-Raman scattering microscope system. BPF narrow band-pass filter, DM dichroic mirror, SPF shortpass filter... Fig. 5.3 Schematic illustration of a fs-laser-based hyper-Raman scattering microscope system. BPF narrow band-pass filter, DM dichroic mirror, SPF shortpass filter...
A. (2009) Compact coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscope based on a picosecond two-color Er fiber laser system. Opt Lett., 34, 2847-2849. [Pg.581]

G., Lattermann, A, Romeike, B.F.M, Marple, E.T., Krafft, C, Dietzek, B, Brehm, B.R., and Popp, J. (2012) In vivo characterization of atherosclerotic plaque depositions by raman-probe spectroscopy and in vitro coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscopic imaging on a rabbit model. Arud. Chem., 84, 7845-7851. [Pg.582]

The current frontiers for the subject of non-equilibrium thennodynamics are rich and active. Two areas dommate interest non-linear effects and molecular bioenergetics. The linearization step used in the near equilibrium regime is inappropriate far from equilibrium. Progress with a microscopic kinetic theory [38] for non-linear fluctuation phenomena has been made. Carefiil experiments [39] confinn this theory. Non-equilibrium long range correlations play an important role in some of the light scattering effects in fluids in far from equilibrium states [38, 39]. [Pg.713]

This text covers quantitative analysis by electron energy-loss spectroscopy in the electron microscope along with instrumentation and applicable electron-scattering theory. [Pg.1328]

The history of EM (for an overview see table Bl.17,1) can be interpreted as the development of two concepts the electron beam either illuminates a large area of tire sample ( flood-beam illumination , as in the typical transmission electron microscope (TEM) imaging using a spread-out beam) or just one point, i.e. focused to the smallest spot possible, which is then scaimed across the sample (scaiming transmission electron microscopy (STEM) or scaiming electron microscopy (SEM)). In both situations the electron beam is considered as a matter wave interacting with the sample and microscopy simply studies the interaction of the scattered electrons. [Pg.1624]

Electron Beam Techniques. One of the most powerful tools in VLSI technology is the scanning electron microscope (sem) (see Microscopy). A sem is typically used in three modes secondary electron detection, back-scattered electron detection, and x-ray fluorescence (xrf). AH three techniques can be used for nondestmctive analysis of a VLSI wafer, where the sample does not have to be destroyed for sample preparation or by analysis, if the sem is equipped to accept large wafer-sized samples and the electron beam is used at low (ca 1 keV) energy to preserve the functional integrity of the circuitry. Samples that do not diffuse the charge produced by the electron beam, such as insulators, require special sample preparation. [Pg.356]

Laser Raman Microprobe. A more sophisticated microscope is the Laser Raman Microprobe, sometimes referred to as MOLE (the molecular orbital laser examiner). This instmment is designed around a light microscope to yield a Raman spectmm (45) on selected areas or particles, often <1 ia volume. The data are related, at least distantly, to iafrared absorption, siace the difference between the frequency of the exciting laser and the observed Raman frequency is the frequency of one of the IR absorption peaks. Both, however, result from rotational and vibrational states. Unfortunately, strong IR absorption bands are weak Raman scatterers and vice versa hence there is no exact correspondence between the two. [Pg.335]

Sample preparation is straightforward for a scattering process such as Raman spectroscopy. Sample containers can be of glass or quartz, which are weak Raman scatterers, and aqueous solutions pose no problems. Raman microprobes have a spatial resolution of - 1 //m, much better than the diffraction limit imposed on ir microscopes (213). Eiber-optic probes can be used in process monitoring (214). [Pg.318]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.14 , Pg.15 , Pg.210 ]




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