Imaging chemical kinetics of radical polymerization with an ultrafast coherent Raman microscope

Numerous mechanisms have been proposed for polymerization to provide qualitative and quantitative prediction of how monomers spatially and temporally arrange into the polymeric chains. However, less is known about this process at the molecular level because the ultrafast chemical reaction is inacces...

詳細記述

書誌詳細
主要な著者: Li, Haozheng, Cheng, Yong, Tang, Huajun, Bi, Yali, Chen, Yage, Yang, Guang, Guo, Shoujing, Tian, Sidan, Liao, Jiangshan, Lv, Xiaohua, Zeng, Shaoqun, Zhu, Mingqiang, Xu, Chenjie, Cheng, Ji-Xin, Wang, Ping
その他の著者: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
フォーマット: Journal Article
言語:English
出版事項: 2020
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145575
その他の書誌記述
要約:Numerous mechanisms have been proposed for polymerization to provide qualitative and quantitative prediction of how monomers spatially and temporally arrange into the polymeric chains. However, less is known about this process at the molecular level because the ultrafast chemical reaction is inaccessible for any form of microscope so far. Here, to address this unmet challenge, a stimulated Raman scattering microscope based on collinear multiple beams (COMB‐SRS) is demonstrated, which allows label‐free molecular imaging of polymer synthesis in action at speed of 2000 frames per second. The field of view of the developed 2 kHz SRS microscope is 30 × 28 µm2 with 50 × 46 pixels and 7 µs dwell time. By catching up the speed of chemical reaction, COMB‐SRS is able to quantitatively visualize the ultrafast dynamics of molecular vibrations with submicron spatial resolution and sub‐millisecond temporal resolution. The propagating polymer waves driven by reaction rate and persistent UV initiation are observed in situ. This methodology is expected to permit the development of novel functional polymers, controllable photoresists, 3D printing, and other new polymerization technologies.