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Single particles as resonators for thermomechanical analysis

Nature Communications, ISSN: 2041-1723, Vol: 11, Issue: 1, Page: 1235
2020
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Temperature and thermometers

Temperature is what small movements of atoms and molecules that make matter feel like. When two materials at different temperatures come in contact, their temperatures become the average of the two. What happens on the small scale is this: the hotter, faster moving molecules and atoms push about the colder ones and each other, which transfers momentum and distributes energy evenly over both materi

Article Description

Thermal methods are indispensable for the characterization of most materials. However, the existing methods require bulk amounts for analysis and give an averaged response of a material. This can be especially challenging in a biomedical setting, where only very limited amounts of material are initially available. Nano- and microelectromechanical systems (NEMS/MEMS) offer the possibility of conducting thermal analysis on small amounts of materials in the nano-microgram range, but cleanroom fabricated resonators are required. Here, we report the use of single drug and collagen particles as micro mechanical resonators, thereby eliminating the need for cleanroom fabrication. Furthermore, the proposed method reveals additional thermal transitions that are undetected by standard thermal methods and provide the possibility of understanding fundamental changes in the mechanical properties of the materials during thermal cycling. This method is applicable to a variety of different materials and opens the door to fundamental mechanistic insights.

Bibliographic Details

Okeyo, Peter Ouma; Larsen, Peter Emil; Kissi, Eric Ofosu; Ajalloueian, Fatemeh; Rades, Thomas; Rantanen, Jukka; Boisen, Anja

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Chemistry; Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology; Physics and Astronomy

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