RESUMO
Photo-activated resin composites are widely used in industry and medicine. Despite extensive chemical characterisation, the micro-scale pattern of resin matrix reactive group conversion between filler particles is not fully understood. Using an advanced synchrotron-based wide-field IR imaging system and state-of-the-art Mie scattering corrections, we observe how the presence of monodispersed silica filler particles in a methacrylate based resin reduces local conversion and chemical bond strain in the polymer phase. Here we show that heterogeneity originates from a lower converted and reduced bond strain boundary layer encapsulating each particle, whilst at larger inter-particulate distances light attenuation and monomer mobility predominantly influence conversion. Increased conversion corresponds to greater bond strain, however, strain generation appears sensitive to differences in conversion rate and implies subtle distinctions in the final polymer structure. We expect these findings to inform current predictive models of mechanical behaviour in polymer-composite materials, particularly at the resin-filler interface.
RESUMO
Infrared spectroscopy of single cells and tissue is affected by Mie scattering. During recent years, several methods have been proposed for retrieving pure absorbance spectra from such measurements, while currently no user-friendly version of the state-of-the-art algorithm is available. In this work, an open-source code for correcting highly scatter-distorted absorbance spectra of cells and tissues is presented, as well as several improvements of the latest version of the Mie correction algorithm based on extended multiplicative signal correction (EMSC) published by Konevskikh et al. In order to test the stability of the code, a set of apparent absorbance spectra was simulated. To this purpose, pure absorbance spectra based on a Matrigel spectrum are simulated. Scattering contributions where obtained by mimicking the scattering features observed in a set of experimentally obtained spectra . It can be concluded that the algorithm is not depending strongly on the reference spectrum used for initializing the algorithm and retrieves well the underlying pure absorbance spectrum. The calculation time of the algorithm is considerably improved with respect to the resonant Mie scattering EMSC algorithm used by the community today.