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Dear community,
I am interested in measuring glass-transition temperature (Tg) distributions at the nanoscale. However, so far I don't know if there are indeed different transition temperatures in the material. For that reason, I would like to do some quick-and-dirty measurements to obtain Tg images without yet purchasing the Nanoscale Thermal Analysis hardware. Here is what it thought might work:
I was wondering if it is possible to map the transition temperatures in usual PeakForce Tapping mode by simply imaging the same area at different temperatures. Let's say I measure one and the same area of a surface (e.g. 5x5 µm) in steps of 5 °C from e.g. 100 to 150 °C. If there are different transition temperatures I should see the modulus dropping at different temperatures as well. Like that it should be possible to obtain a map of Tg's without installing a new hardware and at the resolution of normal PeakForce Tapping mode. Is there any problem about this approach? Could it be worth trying?
Best regards, Dietmar Haba
Hi Dietmar,
That should work. You will of course give up the advantage of heating only a small area of the sample an not affecting the surroundings. As a quick screening test your planned experiments should suffice.
Stefan
Dear Stefan,
Thanks again for your helpful advice. I'm okay with that. If I can see differences strong enough to be measued I will think about the professional methodology.