High-Resolution
Mapping of Thermal History in Polymer Nanocomposites: Gold Nanorods
as Microscale Temperature Sensors
Version 2 2016-02-12, 00:33Version 2 2016-02-12, 00:33
Version 1 2016-02-12, 00:33Version 1 2016-02-12, 00:33
Posted on 2015-12-23 - 00:00
A technique is reported for measuring
and mapping the maximum internal temperature of a structural epoxy
resin with high spatial resolution via the optically detected shape
transformation of embedded gold nanorods (AuNRs). Spatially resolved
absorption spectra of the nanocomposites are used to determine the
frequencies of surface plasmon resonances. From these frequencies
the AuNR aspect ratio is calculated using a new analytical approximation
for the Mie-Gans scattering theory, which takes into account coincident
changes in the local dielectric. Despite changes in the chemical environment,
the calculated aspect ratio of the embedded nanorods is found to decrease
over time to a steady-state value that depends linearly on the temperature
over the range of 100–200 °C. Thus, the optical absorption
can be used to determine the maximum temperature experienced at a
particular location when exposure times exceed the temperature-dependent
relaxation time. The usefulness of this approach is demonstrated by
mapping the temperature of an internally heated structural epoxy resin
with 10 μm lateral spatial resolution.
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Kennedy, W. Joshua; Slinker, Keith A.; Volk, Brent L.; Koerner, Hilmar; Godar, Trenton J.; Ehlert, Gregory
J.; et al. (2016). High-Resolution
Mapping of Thermal History in Polymer Nanocomposites: Gold Nanorods
as Microscale Temperature Sensors. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.5b08188