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Dynamic Light Scattering Microrheology Reveals Multiscale Viscoelasticity of Polymer Gels and Precious Biological Materials

Authors :
Andrew J. Spakowitz
Philip S. DiGiacomo
Audrey Zhu
Justin L. Sonnenburg
Sarah C. Heilshorn
Brad A. Krajina
Carolina Tropini
Source :
ACS Central Science, Vol 3, Iss 12, Pp 1294-1303 (2017), ACS Central Science
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

The development of experimental techniques capable of probing the viscoelasticity of soft materials over a broad range of time scales is essential to uncovering the physics that governs their behavior. In this work, we develop a microrheology technique that requires only 12 μL of sample and is capable of resolving dynamic behavior ranging in time scales from 10–6 to 10 s. Our approach, based on dynamic light scattering in the single-scattering limit, enables the study of polymer gels and other soft materials over a vastly larger hierarchy of time scales than macrorheology measurements. Our technique captures the viscoelastic modulus of polymer hydrogels with a broad range of stiffnesses from 10 to 104 Pa. We harness these capabilities to capture hierarchical molecular relaxations in DNA and to study the rheology of precious biological materials that are impractical for macrorheology measurements, including decellularized extracellular matrices and intestinal mucus. The use of a commercially available benchtop setup that is already available to a variety of soft matter researchers renders microrheology measurements accessible to a broader range of users than existing techniques, with the potential to reveal the physics that underlies complex polymer hydrogels and biological materials.<br />A broadly accessible microrheology technique is developed that reveals viscoelasticity across broad time scales for a variety of soft and biological materials.

Details

ISSN :
23747951 and 23747943
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Central Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....665f2c92402f5a3700e6e60048cb371c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.7b00449