Open Access Article
N. H. P. Orr†
ab,
G. Prévota,
T. Phoua and
L. Cipelletti
*a
aLaboratoire Charles Coulomb (L2C), Université Montpellier, CNRS, Montpellier 34095, Montpellier, France. E-mail: luca.cipelletti@umontpellier.fr
bCPCV, Department of Chemistry, École Normale Supérieure PSL University, Sorbonne Université, CNRS Paris 75005, France
First published on 2nd October 2025
We present a new apparatus that probes simultaneously the macroscopic mechanical response and the microscopic motion in polymer networks under uni-axial strain. The setup leverages photon correlation imaging, a space- and time-resolved dynamic light scattering method, to measure the dynamics along three orthogonal directions and on two distinct length scales, from tens of nanometers to a couple of microns. We show how to avoid artifacts due to scattering from the surface of the polymer films and derive a theoretical expression for the intensity correlation function due to a purely affine deformation, showing that the setup sensitivity may be simply tuned by varying the acceptance angle of the collection optics. Finally, we demonstrate the capabilities of the setup by investigating the microscopic dynamics of a poly(dimethylsiloxne) polymer network under tensile strain in the linear regime. We find that non-affine dynamics dominate on length scales smaller than a few microns, above which the affine response is recovered. Surprisingly, the cross-over length separating the non-affine and affine regimes increases upon decreasing the applied tensile strain.
A thorough understanding of the behavior of soft materials under deformation is of utmost importance for directed material design and optimization of properties, within and beyond the linear regime where failure may eventually occur.1,2 A full picture of soft solids under a mechanical drive requires simultaneous measurements at both microscopic and macroscopic length scales. In recent decades, microscopy coupled with rheology has been widely used to study a range of polymers and other network forming soft materials.3–8 In tandem with recent advances in computational and analytical modeling9–14 a more thorough understanding of the interplay between microscopic and macroscopic behavior is emerging. For example, recently simulations have shown how load sharing between the two networks within a double network elastomer leads to the delocalization of stress so that a double network inherits both the stiffness of its brittle first network and the ductility of its soft second network hindering cascades of correlated bond breakage.10,14
Scattering techniques lack the sub-micron spatial resolution of microscopy, but they enable a wider range of length scales and larger sample volumes to be probed. Furthermore, unlike microscopy, they do not require the material constituents to be of size comparable to the wavelength of visible light, allowing for measurements on a much wider range of systems. While conventional dynamic light scattering (DLS) in the far field averages over the whole volume illuminated by a laser beam and over the experiment time, more recent, powerful approaches such as differential dynamic microscopy15 and photon correlation imaging16 allow for time- and spatially-resolved experiments. As such, they are particularly insightful when materials deform heterogeneously, e.g. in the non-linear stress versus strain regime near and during material failure.
Much of the previous work has concentrated on the multiple scattering regime probed by diffusing wave spectroscopy, DWS.17 A remarkable feature of DWS is its extreme sensitivity to small-scale motion, down to a fraction of nanometers, which enables very small deformation fields to be accurately quantified.18–23 Single scattering experiments, however, remain particularly attractive for several reasons. First, many polymer materials are almost transparent, so that they may be directly probed by DLS, while DWS typically requires adding significant amounts of tracer scatterers, usually colloidal particles embedded in the material, which may alter its mechanical properties. Tracer particles might still be added to improve the DLS signal for very transparent materials, but in significantly smaller amounts as compared to DWS. Second, single scattering can discriminate between the affine and non-affine contributions to microscopic motion,24–26 a highly desirable feature since the affine displacement is of little interest and can be directly obtained from the macroscopic sample deformation. This is not the case in DWS: as photons undergo many scattering events, they travel through the material in a random walk way, thereby averaging microscopic displacements in all directions, including motion due to the affine deformation field.18,19,27 Finally, single scattering is the relevant regime for X-photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS), the equivalent of DLS using synchrotron coherent X-rays, where experiments probing microscopic dynamics simultaneously to mechanical measurements are increasingly popular, see e.g. ref. 28.
Notably, only shear deformations have been thoroughly examined in single scattering experiments,3–5,24,25,29–31 with the exception of the XPCS investigation of the dynamics of filler particles in an elastomer.32 However, for many materials tensile tests are more relevant. We fill this gap by presenting here a new setup for simultaneously measuring the mechanical properties and microscopic dynamics of self-standing polymer films in tensile tests. The microscopic dynamics are quantified by photon correlation imaging, PCI,16 a dynamic light scattering method in the single scattering regime that leverages CMOS cameras to provide spatial maps of the dynamics between arbitrary pairs of experimental times t and t + τ. We discuss possible artifacts arising from surface scattering and how to mitigate them. We demonstrate the capabilities of the new setup with measurements of the microscopic dynamics in poly(dimethylsiloxane), PDMS, networks during uni-axial extension tests at constant pulling speed, unveiling an unexpected strain-dependent contribution of non-affine dynamics even at the smallest applied strains.
The rest of the paper is organized as follows: in Section 2 we detail the PCI-based setup, summarize our analysis routines and describe the PDMS polymer sample preparation. In Section 3, we derive the theoretical form of the two-time intensity correlation function g2 − 1 measured by PCI for purely affine motion, briefly mentioning how non-affine motion may accelerate the decay of g2 − 1. We present our experimental results in Section 4, starting by discussing the mitigation of surface scattering in order to probe microscopic motion from the bulk of the sample (Sections 4.1 and 4.2). In Section 4.3 we discuss how microscopic motion depends on the probed direction and length scale, unveiling an unexpected dependence on the applied macroscopic pre-strain. Finally, in Section 5 we briefly discuss and summarize our findings.
:
90 (R
:
T) non-polarizing beam splitter cube (Thorlabs BS037) directs the diverging beam to the FS and BS paths, respectively, see Fig. 1c. In the FS path, the beam is collimated by an f = 80 mm plano-convex lens, producing an expanded beam with 1/e2 diameter of ≈50 mm. Similarly, in the BS channel the beam is collimated by two crossed cylindrical lenses, with focal lengths of f = 100 and f = 300 mm, respectively. The shape of the thus collimated beam is oval with major and minor axes with 1/e2 lengths of ≈20 mm and ≈60 mm, respectively. Note that the intensity of back-scattered light is typically lower than that for forward scattering: the choice of lenses and of the 10
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90 intensity beam splitter was made so that the cameras can use the same exposure time for light coming from the BS and FS channels. Finally, the collimated beam is directed towards the sample by broadband, high reflectance mirrors (Newport 20Q620BB.HR2), with d = 50.8 mm, see Fig. 1c.
The scattered light is collected along two paths. Each passes a Newport diaphragm placed in front of an f = 80 mm plano-convex objective lens. These lenses form a speckled image of the illuminated sample onto the ams CMV2000 CMOS sensors of two Basler acA2000-340km Camera Link cameras, with 5 times magnification for both FS and BS. The purpose of the diaphragms is to control the acceptance angle of the collection optics, thereby setting the speckle size,33 which is typically comparable to the pixel size. The sample image is formed by light scattered with different scattering vectors q, depending on the illuminating and collection paths. Three independent scattering vectors are probed: q(FSx), q(FSy) and q(BSz), which are approximately parallel to their respective Cartesian directions, x, y or z, as in Fig. 1b. The magnitude of the two FS vectors is approximately equal to each other with a value of qFS = 2.0 μm−1 resulting in a sensitivity of microscopic displacements within the polymer network of the order of π/qFS = 1.6 μm. Likewise, the magnitude of the BS vectors is qBS = 34 μm−1, with a corresponding probed length scale of approximately 90 nm, 17.8 times shorter than for FS. Note that, due to the large scattering angle and the small distance between cameras, the q vectors of both BS cameras are approximately equal and will be treated as such herein. In practice, all BS data were collected with camera 1, except for those in Fig. 2c and 4e and g. The geometry of the scattering vectors with respect to the sample is shown in Fig. 1b. The components of q are [qx, qy, qz] = [2.1, 1.8 × 10−3, 0.13] μm−1 for FSx, [qx, qy, qz] = [4.8 × 10−4, 1.9, 6.8 × 10−2] μm−1 for FSy and [qx, qy, qz] = [1.5, 8.1 × 10−2, 34] μm−1 for BSz (camera 1), and [qx, qy, qz] = [0.32, 1.5, 34] μm−1 for BSz (camera 2), where the sample lays in the xy plane and x is the pulling direction. Image acquisition is done by alternating between FS and BS illumination, using two shutters, one of which is custom built, while the other is a Newport electronic shutter (76
992) with a 6 mm aperture. The shutters are placed directly after the beam splitter along each path and are synchronized with the cameras acquiring speckle images. The shutter triggering and camera acquisition are controlled via custom software running on a PC connected to the setup.
To explore the role of speckle size on the decay of the correlation function, discussed in Section 4.2, we use a modified setup that allows for acquiring images with different speckle sizes at the same scattering angle. The setup is schematically shown in Fig. 3c: forward scattered light passes through a 50
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50 non-polarizing beam splitter cube, 2 inches in width (Thorlabs BS031), before being collected by objective lenses on each branch of the optical path. In this case, the diaphragm in front of the objective lenses was set to a different aperture to obtain images with different speckle size on each camera.
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| Fig. 3 (a) Correlation functions for two experiments (solid lines), with two different speckle sizes for a PDMS sample 1.77 mm in thickness, measured at the FSx scattering vector. The dashed lines are the theoretical prediction for purely affine motion, eqn (5). The largest strain increment shown here, |Δε| = 10−1, corresponds to a time lag of τ = 17.2 min. (b) Separate plot of each of the three sinc2 factors of the theoretical g2 − 1, for the experimental conditions of the data shown in (a). Here, only the x component varies with speckle size (blue and red lines) for the different speckle sizes. (c) The modified setup to collect the same scattered light with different speckle sizes. | ||
Simultaneously to PCI, we perform uni-axial tensile tests, thanks to a custom-built, strain-controlled rheometer. Our PDMS samples (dimensions in x, y, and z of ≈25 mm, 10 mm and between 0.32 mm and 2.85 mm, respectively) are held by two clamps. Strain is applied by displacing the clamps along the x direction, using translation stages (Newport M-UMR5.25), set in motion by two motorized actuators (Newport LTA-HL). Unless stated otherwise, the two motors pull in opposite directions at speeds of 1.25 μm s−1 and 5 nm s−1 for FS and BS experiments, respectively. These strain rates were chosen pragmatically to ensure well resolved g2 − 1 correlation functions and, in practice, were limited by the sample exposure time (typically of the order of 10s of ms), frame rate (typically 0.1–1 s) and acquisition time of the camera and computer setup. This results in very small imposed strain rates of ≈1 × 10−4 s−1 and ≈4 × 10−7 s−1 for FS and BS, respectively. The actual clamp displacement is recorded by a position detector (Keyence IL-065 laser head with an IL-1000 sensor). Throughout this paper, we quantify deformation using the true strain ε(t) = ln[1 + ΔL(t)/L0] where ΔL(t) = L(t) − L0 and L0 are the change in and the macroscopic length, respectively, in the x direction. An Andilog Centor Star Touch force gauge and SBlock force load cell measure the resistance force exerted by the sample. True stress is calculated as σ = F/(A − νε), where F is the magnitude of the force measured from the meter, A is the initial cross-sectional area in the yz plane, and ν is the Poisson ratio, describing the response along directions orthogonal to the applied strain. For our PDMS samples, we measure
by image analysis of small deformations in the xy (sample) plane. We assume that ν is the same in the yz plane. As shown by the stress–strain curve of Fig. 1a, in the range of deformations investigated here the sample behaves linearly, with a Young's modulus of 1.8 MPa.
As discussed in detail in Section 4.1, single scattering experiments require enhancing the scattering from the bulk of the sample as compared to that from its surface. To this end, we incorporate a small amount of melamin resin colloidal particles to the polymer network (MicroParticles GmbH, diameter 418 nm, mass fraction 3 × 10−4). Melamin resin was chosen because of its compatibility with PDMS and because its refractive index, nMR = 1.68, is much higher than that of PDMS (nPDMS = 1.43), thus ensuring a strong scattering signal even at low concentration (SI). The particle concentration is chosen so as to obtain a transmittance of about 80%, thus avoiding multiple scattering. Furthermore, we immerse the clamps and sample in a custom-built pool filled with glycerol, which reduces the refractive index mismatch between the sample and the surrounding medium, thereby drastically reducing surface scattering. The pool is shaped to direct reflections of the illuminating beam away from the cameras, see Fig. 1c. We checked that the mechanical properties of the polymer films measured by our setup are not significantly affected neither by the incorporation of particles (SI) nor by the presence of glycerol, as expected due to the trace amount of particles and the very slow pulling speed.
![]() | (1) |
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1 mass ratio of polymer (SYLGARD 184 - BASE) to curing agent, degassed under vacuum and then poured into polystyrene Petri-dishes with an inverted lid using spacers to produce sheets of varying thicknesses. They were then cured in a 60 °C oven for 2 hours. PDMS containing 3 × 10−4 mass fraction melamine formaldehyde colloidal particles were prepared by dispersing melamine resin particles (Microparticles GMBH) with diameter 418 nm first in acetone using sonication and magnetic stirring. Then, the acetone and particle dispersion was added to the PDMS polymer and mechanically stirred at 10
000 rpm for 20 minutes. The mixture was placed under vacuum until the acetone evaporated. Curing agent, again with a 9
:
1 ratio, was added and mixed well and degassed under vacuum. Sheets of various thicknesses were prepared as before. Particles are added to the samples to increase bulk scattering as discussed in Section 4.1. The particle size is much larger than the mesh size of PDMS, 10–16 nm, as reported using AFM40 on similarly crosslinked samples. One can also estimate the mesh size using entropic rubber-elastic scaling where the mesh size
. With a Young's modulus, E = 1.8 MPa, we obtain a smaller mesh size ξ ≈ 1 nm, again much smaller than the added microparticle size. Therefore, we expect microparticles to be firmly embedded in the polymer network and thus their motion to be representative of that of the sample, as typically observed for submicron particles larger than the mesh size, see, e.g., ref. 41.
For single scattering, the intensity correlation function may be written in terms of the sum over the contributions of all scatterers, or, equivalently, as the Fourier transform of the probability distribution P(Δr) of the scatterers' displacement.34,47 For strain-induced dynamics, one has
![]() | (2) |
For affine motion, the probability distribution of displacements factors out in its components along x, y, and z: P(Δr) = Px(Δx)Py(Δy)Pz(Δz). We consider the displacement of a scatterer initially at position (x, y, z). As shown in the SI, upon a macroscopic true strain increment Δε along x and assuming a perfectly elastic sample with Poisson's ratio ν, the scatterer displacement is
![]() | (3) |
In order to determine simple expressions for Px, Py, Pz, we approximate Vs by a square prism of side ls and height lz. Since the probability distribution for the scatterers' position is constant within Vs, using eqn (3) one has
![]() | (4) |
, one obtains
![]() | (5) |
Importantly, eqn (5) shows that not only does the correlation function depend on Δε and the components of the scattering vector, but also on ls, lz and ν. Therefore, careful attention is required to probe rearrangements along a desired direction within the sample. For example, to probe rearrangements parallel to the direction of extension, x, an experimentalist must verify that lsqx > νlzqz, which for sufficiently thick samples (lz ≈ 2 mm) and small speckle sizes (ls ≈ 50 μm), may not be the case. These considerations will be made in Fig. 3b and 4b, d and f, where the three sinc2 terms of eqn (5) will be plotted separately, as a reference against which experimental data should be compared.
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| Fig. 4 (a), (c), and (e): correlation functions for several pre-strain values, for the scattering vectors FSx, FSy and BSz, respectively, for a 1.77 mm thick PDMS sample. Data at the two FS scattering angles were collected simultaneously. Panels (b), (d) and (f), correspondingly show the x, y and z sinc2 terms of eqn (5) for FSx, FSy and BSz, respectively. The quickest decay dictates which component of motion is expected to dominate the decay of g2 − 1. The full correlation functions for purely affine motion, i.e. the product of the three terms displayed in each panel (b), (d) and (f), are shown in (a), (c) and (e) as blue dashed lines. The largest strain increment shown for FS in panels (a) and (c), |Δε| = 2 × 10−1, corresponds to a time lag of τ = 34.5 min. Likewise, for BS in panel (e), |Δε| = 2 × 10−3, corresponds to a time lag of τ = 83.3 min. (g) Ratio of the measured and theoretical characteristic decay strain increments, where g2 − 1 drops to half of its initial value. | ||
Quite generally, non-affine displacements speed up the decay of g2 − 1, because they introduce additional sources of dynamics. Therefore, eqn (5), the theoretical expression for a purely affine deformation, represents the limiting case of the slowest decay that may be observed for a strained material. The actual decay observed in experiments is typically faster,26 as we shall show in Sections 4.2 and 4.3 for our PDMS samples. Decoupling the contributions of affine and non-affine dynamics is probably one of the greatest challenges in single scattering measurements on driven systems.24,26,30,48–50 Data analysis may be greately simplified by assuming that non-affine and affine displacements as uncorrelated, as hypothesized in previous works,6,24,26,30,50 or if the decay times of the affine and non-affine contributions are well separated.51 Under these assumptions, the intensity correlation function factors in the product of two terms, one accounting for affine and the other for non-affine contributions, respectively. Even if this assumption may not hold, the ratio of the experimental g2 − 1 to the theoretical form of eqn (5) provides a convenient means to asses the importance of non-affine dynamics.
Tests with other samples for which surface scattering was deliberately enhanced by roughening their surface indicate that these oscillations result from scattering from the sample surfaces. As the sample is stretched, the two surfaces parallel to the xy plane approach each other, due to the positive Poisson's ratio, causing interferences that oscillate from constructive to destructive as the sample is increasingly strained. This phenomenon is reminiscent of the oscillations of the transfer function of a Fabry–Perrot interferometer,52 with the two surfaces of the polymer film acting here similarly to the reflecting surfaces in a Fabry–Perrot cavity. However, we emphasize that here the phenomenon is caused by scattering, not by the reflection of the incident beam, since the cameras are positioned away from specular reflection. Rather, light scattered by the first surface encountered by the incident beam interferes with light scattered by the second surface, which is illuminated by the light transmitted through the almost transparent sample. Note that surface scattering is likely to occur, because the polymer samples are not optically flat: any imperfections in the mold used for sample preparation will be imprinted on its surfaces.
To rationalize these oscillations, we derived a modified version of eqn (4) and (5) assuming that scattering from the bulk is negligible as compared to that originating from a thin layer of thickness lsurf ≪ lz at both sample surfaces. Accordingly, Pz has to be modified as sketched in the inset of Fig. 2b. Mathematically, the modified Pz may be expressed as
![]() | (6) |
, and the identity
, we obtain
![]() | (7) |
.
The intensity correlation function shown in Fig. 2a differs somehow from the form predicted by eqn (7), namely because the minima of the experimental g2 − 1 never reach zero. This may be due to the oversimplified modeling adopted here: in particular, we neglected both bulk scattering and the attenuation of the incoming beam propagating through the sample. Nonetheless, to test whether eqn (7) captures the essential features of the oscillations, we focus on their wavelength and compare the measured λosc to its theoretical value.
We perform experiments on samples of different thicknesses and plot the experimental wavelength of oscillations in the correlation function against
in Fig. 2b. The experimental λosc is in very good agreement with the theory, shown by the gray dashed line, with no fitting parameters. This confirms that surface scattering is responsible for the oscillations. Note that (very small) oscillations with the same wavelength are also seen in the FS experiment. Since qz for the FS configuration is much smaller than for the BS one, these oscillations can not originate from forward-scattered light. Rather, they are due to a small fraction of the incoming beam being reflected at the exit of the sample. This reflected beam counter-propagates in the sample and originates back-scattered light that is collected in the FS experiment, a phenomenon similar to that reported in ref. 48.
To measure dynamics that come from the bulk of the sample and not from the surfaces, we make two changes to the apparatus. First, we greatly reduce the surface scattering, by immersing the sample in a pool filled with glycerol, whose refractive index is much closer to that of the sample as compared to air. The wedge shape of the pool, as seen in Fig. 1a, is crucial to divert reflections of light scattered by the sample away from the cameras. Second, we increase scattering from the bulk by incorporating melamine formaldehyde colloidal particles, as detailed in Section 2.3. Repeating the experiments with these two changes results in correlation functions without oscillations for both BS and FS, as can be seen in Fig. 2c. All data shown in the reminder of the paper were taken on particle-seeded PDMS samples immersed in glycerol.
We find that a few precautions should be taken in order to obtain well-reproducible correlation functions that decay in an approximately sinc2(x) -like way. First, measurements are best taken during a return travel after the sample has been pre-strained, i.e. for a set of negative Δε. This minimizes the risk of slip at the clamps: indeed, even a macroscopically undetectable slip can induce unpredictable variations in the correlation function, due to the sensitivity of the technique. Second, correlation functions are measured from a stationary region in the center of the sample as the two motors apply an equal (in magnitude) velocity to each end of the sample. This prevents a translation of the sample relative to glass wall of the pool, thus avoiding oscillations in g2 − 1 that may arise from interferences between light scattered from the pool wall and from the sample. Indeed, the distance between the sample and the glass wall may vary during the test if both are not perfectly aligned to the direction of the applied strain, which experimentally is difficult to achieve. In practice, all the correlation functions shown in the following were collected at the center of a strained sample for a single return journey.
To test experimentally the dependence of g2 − 1 on ls, we modify the experimental apparatus shown in Fig. 1. As illustrated in Fig. 3c, we insert a beam splitter along the FSx collection path and move the FSy camera and its objective onto one of the light paths exiting the beam splitter. With this arrangement, both cameras collect the same light scattered in the FSx direction, but the diaphragms placed in front of their respective objective lenses are set to a different aperture, so that the speckles for camera 1 are larger than those for camera 2, see the images in Fig. 3c. Fig. 3a shows, for two independent experiments at different pre-strains ε, how the correlation functions measured at q(FSx) change with speckle size (solid lines). The magnitude of the change of the decay rate with speckle size agrees very well with theory, confirming the dependence on ls. Interestingly, this indicates that one can tune the sensitivity of the setup to strain-induced microscopic dynamics simply by varying the speckle size, i.e. by opening or closing the objective diaphragms.
Fig. 3a also shows that the experimental correlation functions generally lay below the correspondent theoretical curves (dashed lines), calculated using eqn (5). This suggests that, at the 3 μm length scale probed by FS, there is a non-affine microscopic response to strain in the polymer network, in addition to affine displacements, agreeing with theory9,53 and experiments6–8,54 on a variety of polymer networks. Note that these non-affine dynamics are better seen in the initial part of g2 − 1, corresponding to localized displacements, while the tail of the experimental correlation function is closer to the theoretical expression for affine motion. This suggests that non-affinity is more pronounced on smaller length scales, a feature that will be discussed in Section 4.3.
Some clues on the nature of these non-affine dynamics are provided by the ls dependence of the curves. Visual inspection of the shapes of the measured g2 − 1 functions as compared to the predicted affine decays (Fig. 3a) reveals that the relative difference in shape is similar for both speckle sizes. In other words, changing the speckle size translates both the measured and theoretical correlation functions along the horizontal axis with little change in relative shape. This rules out diffusive, random-walk-like non-affine dynamics. This is because the g2 − 1 decay for random motion does not depend on speckle size. Therefore, if the non-affine motion was purely diffusive, the relative decays of the measured and affine g2 − 1 would not be the same for two different speckle sizes. By contrast, the ls dependence of non-affinity suggests that these dynamics are more pronounced when probing a larger scattering volume, as for affine displacements, hinting at some degree of correlation between the magnitude of affine and non-affine displacements. This is similar to results found by optical microscopy in polyacrylamide gels, where the non-affine mean squared displacement of tracer particles was found to increase as the square of the applied strain.6
As a final remark on the speckle size dependence of g2 − 1, we note that this effect is most relevant when probing thin samples in forward scattering, i.e. for small lz and qz. Indeed, a close look at eqn (5) shows that if lsqx or lsνqy are smaller than lzνqz, the decay of g2 − 1 is ruled by the speckle-size independent
term. To illustrate this point, we plot separately the components of the theoretical affine g2 − 1 decay in Fig. 3b, for the conditions of our experiment (FSx scattering geometry and sample thickness lz = 1.77 mm). One can see that for the larger speckle size, ls = 110 μm (blue curve), the decay of the sinc2 term containing qx (“x term”) is faster than those due to the other terms, resulting in a marked dependence on ls. As the speckle size decreases, the decay of the x term becomes slower. For the smallest tested speckle size, ls = 48 μm, the decay rate of the x and z terms has become comparable. For even smaller speckles, we expect the overall decay of g2 − 1 to be ruled by the z term, which does not contain ls, and hence to be independent of the speckle size.
We quantify the importance of non-affine motion as a function of pre-strain ε in Fig. 4g, where we plot
, the characteristic strain increment over which the experimental g2 − 1 functions decay, Δεd, normalized by the corresponding Δεd (Affine) for the affine theoretical expression, eqn (5). Δεd is defined as the strain increment where g2 − 1 = 0.5. For the FSx data,
at low pre-strain, 0.034, demonstrating large non-affine motion. However, at pre-strains above ε > 0.14 Δεd becomes 0.94 of the purely affine value, showing a transition to mostly affine motion. The non-affinity seen here cannot be due to strain-induced damage, because in that case one would expect non-affine rearrangements to become increasingly important as the network is strained, contrary to the trend observed here. Furthermore, we recall that the range of ε probed here falls well within the mechanical linear regime, see Fig. 1a. Rather, we propose that non-affine motion at low strain is due to the gradual unraveling of polymer segment coils between cross-links. As ε grows, the polymer chains become increasingly aligned along the stretching direction, losing degrees of freedom associated with motion along y and z, which results in microscopic displacements close to purely affine. This effect tends to saturate for ε ≥ 0.14, consistent with our observations in Fig. 3a, where the dynamics measured at ε = 0.16 and 0.20 were essentially identical. Note that at these strains the polymer chains are certainly not completely uncoiled, otherwise one would observe strain hardening due to the transition from entropic to enthalpic elasticity, a feature not seen in Fig. 1(a).
We report in Fig. 4(c) the correlation functions measured in the FSy geometry, for which the magnitude of the scattering vector is essentially the same as for FSx, but its main component is oriented along y, perpendicular to the stretching direction. As a reference, we show in Fig. 4d the three terms of the purely affine g2 − 1, whose decay is equally dominated by displacements parallel to the thickness of the sample, along z, and along y, since for FSy qyls ≈ qzlz. The overall trend of the experimental data is similar to that seen for FSx: significant non-affinity is detected at small pre-strain, while at larger ε the data approach the theory for purely affine dynamics. Contrary to the motion along x, in the y and z direction polymer coils do not unravel with increasing strain. In fact, due to the positive Poisson's ratio, the polymer chains become more compressed along y and z. However, again, the measured decays approach the affine decay (blue dashed line) as pre-strain is increased, indicating a decrease in non-affine motion. We suggest that the combination of stretching along x and compression along z and y increasingly confines the motion of polymer segments and results in less non-affinity. The ratio of the measured and theoretical affine decay strains for FSy is shown in Fig. 4g (red line and symbols). We observe a similar trend but a curve translated downwards when compared to FSx, indicating a higher non-affine contribution at all strains. This suggests a smaller loss of degree of freedoms of the polymer chains in the direction of compression, as compared to that in the stretching direction.
Consistent with the data of Fig. 3a discussed above, we observe that for the FS correlation functions of Fig. 4a and b deviations with respect to purely affine dynamics are more pronounced at small strain increments, i.e. on small length scales. To directly asses the length scale dependence of non-affinity, we plot in Fig. 4e the BSz experimental g2 − 1 functions, and in Fig. 4f the corresponding three terms of the theoretical purely affine dynamics. The length scale explored in the BS geometry is ≈90 nm, and the decay of g2 − 1 is dominated by motion along z. In contrast to the FS data, in Fig. 4e we see that the correlation functions are far less dependent on pre-strain: at all the tested Δε, g2 − 1 decays significantly faster than the affine prediction, with very little changes with ε. The relative importance of non-affine dynamics is shown in Fig. 4g, confirming no significant dependence on strain, exhibiting a value of 0.57 across all measured ε. Note that higher strains were inaccessible due to a high sensitivity to sample slip at the clamps in BS. Therefore, at a 90 nm length scale, significant non-affine motion persists during stretching. This observation is consistent with the notion that non-affine motion is more prevalent at smaller length scales and agrees with findings for hydrogels under shear.6 For our PDMS samples at a pre-strain ε ≈ 0.14, the FS and BS data collectively indicate that affine displacements are recovered on length scales of the order of a few microns. Thus, the cross-over between microscopic non-affinity and the macroscopic affine deformation expected for an elastic sample occurs on length scales surprisingly larger than the network mesh size. The dependence on ε uncovered here suggests that this cross-over may occur at even larger length scales upon decreasing the pre-strain.
Working in the single scattering regime requires special care. In particular, we have shown that surface scattering may dominate the scattering signal for nearly transparent polymer samples. Unfortunately, in the configuration presented here surface scattering carries little useful physical information, besides the measurement of the Poisson's ratio along the sample thickness: the associated g2 − 1 exhibits oscillations that only depend on the change of thickness during stretching. We have proposed and demonstrated an effective way to suppress the contribution of surface scattering, by immersing the sample in glycerol, to drastically reduce the refractive index jump at its surface, and by embedding tracer particles in the polymer network. At the low particle concentration presented in this work, tracer particles hardly affect the mechanical properties of the network and are slaved to it, thus faithfully reporting the polymer dynamics. At larger concentrations, filler particles are routinely used to improve the mechanical properties of, e.g., elastomers. Investigating their dynamics, especially in the non-linear regime, is a promising way to understand the relationship between microscopic rearrangements and macroscopic properties, e.g. in strain-induced aging.32
In experiments probing the dynamics under a time-evolving strain, it is important to quantify the contribution of affine displacements to the measured g2 − 1, in order to discriminate between affine and non-affine dynamics, the latter typically being of greater interest. Unlike in small-angle scattering under shear, where it is possible to isolate non-affine motion by choosing q oriented in the vorticity direction,24 for free-standing samples under tensile strain affine motion occurs in the three x, y, and z directions. We have derived a simple expression for the affine g2 − 1, containing sinc2 terms similar to those already identified for far-field scattering under extension or shear, see e.g. ref. 24, 28 and 32. However, the expression derived here, eqn (5), differs from previous ones owing to the explicit dependence on two length scales: the sample thickness lz and the speckle size ls. Because typically lz ≫ ls, the affine g2 − 1 may be mostly sensitive to motion along the sample thickness, even for small angle scattering where the z component of q is much smaller than qx or qy. A careful determination of the three components of the scattering vector and plots like those of Fig. 3b and 4b, d and f are useful ways to understand the relative importance of affine motion along the different directions for a given optical configuration.
The dependence on speckle size ls is due to the peculiar imaging geometry of PCI. It can be leveraged to conveniently tune the sensitivity of the setup to microscopic motion: we have shown that closing the diaphragm of the PCI objective lens results in larger speckles and a faster decay of g2 − 1 with Δε. Although not tested here, the setup could be easily modified to collect scattered light in the far field, by placing the cameras in the back focal plane of the objective lenses. In this case, ls would be replaced by the lateral size lxy of the illuminated sample volume in the x, y plane, which would typically be comparable to or larger than the sample thickness. As a result, the FS g2 − 1 would be sensitive essentially only to motion along x or y, because one would have qxlxy ≫ qzlz or qylxy ≫ qzlz, for cameras 1 or 2, respectively. The far field geometry is also used in XPCS, where the beam size, however, is typically of the order of a few tens of microns at most. For XPCS, we thus expect the same kind of analysis of the relative weight of motion along x, y, and z to be important. As a final remark on the contribution of affine displacements, we note that they are relevant only if g2− 1 is measured while the sample is macroscopically deformed, as in this work. For other protocols, such as stress relaxation at fixed imposed strain,32 or the echo protocol where a sinusoidal deformation is imposed and the dynamics are probed stroboscopically at each cycle,55–57 the macroscopic strain between successive speckle images is zero and the affine deformation field vanishes.
As an example of the possibilities of the new setup, we investigated the microscopic dynamics of PDMS networks. We unveiled substantial non-affine dynamics even at very low strains, well within the mechanical linear regime. By measuring the dynamics at different q vectors, we have shown that the microscopic dynamics are strongly non-affine at short length scales ≈90 nm. A cross-over to affine displacements is observed at larger length scales, of the order of a few microns. Our results show that non-affine displacements extend over length scales surprisingly larger than the mesh size, likely due to the disordered nature of the network. Remarkably, non-affine displacements decrease with increasing pre-strain, an effect that we attributed to polymer chains becoming less coiled-up as pre-strain increases. Finally, the speckle size dependence of g2 − 1 has revealed that these non-affine dynamics are not fully decorrelated from affine displacements, in that the relative displacement between scatterers increase with the size of the probed sample volume, as for affine motion.
We end by noting that this apparatus may be applied to any free-standing and (nearly) transparent material, such as, e.g., biological samples, elastomers and hydrogels, to examine their microscopic responses under tensile tests. The main limitations to its general applicability concern the optical properties of the sample: scattering should occur predominantly under single scattering conditions, with a high enough signal, and absorption should be negligible. The space and time scales over which the dynamics are probed are limited by the optical layout and the use of CMOS cameras: the shortest time delay is of the order of 1 ms, and the dynamics are spatially mapped at a ∼50–200 μm coarsening level.
In our experiments, we have probed microscopic motion in samples whose mechanical behavior is dominated by solid-like response.58 Future research lines include investigating the interplay between elastic and dissipative processes at the microscopic level in systems where the storage and loss moduli are comparable, including by exploring systematically the role of the deformation rate. Other interesting research lines may involve different rheological protocols, e.g. as in recovery rheology,59 where the recoverable strain and microscopic dynamics would be measured after the abrupt cessation of elongation in an oscillatory test, or in the stress relaxation or oscillatory tests with the echo protocol mentioned above, which are more easily dealt with, since the dynamics are probed at fixed macroscopic deformation and the affine deformation fields vanishes. Another possible use of the apparatus presented here is the measurement of the thickness of a film as a function of the applied strain, leveraging the oscillations discussed in relation to Fig. 2: this precise, non-invasive measure would be of interest, e.g., for materials exhibiting an anisotropic Poisson's ratio. Finally, we note that, while in this work we demonstrated the new setup in the rheological linear regime, we expect its capabilities to be fully exploited in the non-linear regime, since localized damage may be detected at a microscopic scale thanks to the space-resolved features of PCI. We are currently leveraging these capabilities to investigate the spatio-temporal evolution of the microscopic dynamics at the onset of crack propagation in pre-notched multiple elastomer networks.60
Supplementary information (SI): three speckle movies (.avi files) and a pdf file discussing bulk vs. surface scattering, the effect of the addition of tracer particles on the rheological properties of the samples, the calculation of the affine displacement field under uni-axial strain, and the experimental parameters for the speckle movies. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5sm00865d.
Footnote |
| † Present address: CPCV, Department of Chemistry École Normale Supérieure PSL University Sorbonne Université CNRS Paris 75005, France. |
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