Leveraging the lateral spatial resolution of a confocal Raman microscope to resolve micron to sub-micron layers in polymer laminates
Applications | 2017 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Polymer laminates combine multiple thin layers of different polymers to achieve tailored chemical, mechanical, and barrier properties for industries such as food packaging and pharmaceuticals.
Advancements in manufacturing demand precise characterization of micron to sub-micron layers to ensure product quality, aid failure analysis, and support reverse engineering.
This study demonstrates the use of confocal Raman microscopy to resolve and identify very thin layers in polymer laminates.
Two case studies (microfilms A and B) illustrate how instrument configuration—laser wavelength, objective magnification, and pinhole size—affects lateral spatial resolution and layer discrimination.
Two polymer laminate samples were microtomed into films, flattened with pentane, and mounted on glass slides.
A Thermo Scientific DXR2 Raman Microscope with a 532 nm laser (5 mW), 100× objective (N.A. 0.90), and 25 µm confocal pinhole was used.
Data acquisition and processing employed Thermo Scientific OMNIC for Dispersive Raman software.
• Microfilm A: Raman line mapping over 27.4 µm with 0.2 µm steps revealed seven layers: four polyethylene (PE), two polypropylene (PP), and one polyvinyl alcohol (PVA).
• PVA layer thickness estimated at 1.2 µm by full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the Raman correlation profile.
• Microfilm B: 3-D Raman area imaging (3 µm × 20 µm) and correlation profiling identified the same seven-layer structure.
• PVA layer thickness of ~0.4 µm was resolved, close to the theoretical lateral resolution limit (~0.4 µm) based on the Rayleigh criterion.
• The study confirms that optimized confocal Raman configurations can differentiate adjacent polymer layers without cross-contamination.
Confocal Raman microscopy with proper laser wavelength, objective, and pinhole settings can resolve and chemically identify layers down to 0.4 µm in polymer laminates, approaching theoretical spatial resolution limits.
This method offers significant advantages for quality assurance and materials research in multilayer polymer systems.
1. Guillory P., Deschaines T., Henson P. Materials Today, 2009, 12(4), 38–39.
2. Rzhevskii A., Ibrahim M., Ramirez J., Macisaac C. Thermo Scientific White Paper 52699, 2015.
3. Guillory P., Deschaines T., Henson P. Thermo Scientific Application Note 51718, 2008.
RAMAN Spectroscopy, Microscopy, Software
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Polymer laminates combine multiple thin layers of different polymers to achieve tailored chemical, mechanical, and barrier properties for industries such as food packaging and pharmaceuticals.
Advancements in manufacturing demand precise characterization of micron to sub-micron layers to ensure product quality, aid failure analysis, and support reverse engineering.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study demonstrates the use of confocal Raman microscopy to resolve and identify very thin layers in polymer laminates.
Two case studies (microfilms A and B) illustrate how instrument configuration—laser wavelength, objective magnification, and pinhole size—affects lateral spatial resolution and layer discrimination.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Two polymer laminate samples were microtomed into films, flattened with pentane, and mounted on glass slides.
A Thermo Scientific DXR2 Raman Microscope with a 532 nm laser (5 mW), 100× objective (N.A. 0.90), and 25 µm confocal pinhole was used.
Data acquisition and processing employed Thermo Scientific OMNIC for Dispersive Raman software.
Instrumentation Used
- DXR2 Raman Microscope
- 532 nm excitation laser, 5 mW
- 100× objective, numerical aperture 0.90
- 25 µm confocal pinhole
- OMNIC Dispersive Raman software suite
Main Results and Discussion
• Microfilm A: Raman line mapping over 27.4 µm with 0.2 µm steps revealed seven layers: four polyethylene (PE), two polypropylene (PP), and one polyvinyl alcohol (PVA).
• PVA layer thickness estimated at 1.2 µm by full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the Raman correlation profile.
• Microfilm B: 3-D Raman area imaging (3 µm × 20 µm) and correlation profiling identified the same seven-layer structure.
• PVA layer thickness of ~0.4 µm was resolved, close to the theoretical lateral resolution limit (~0.4 µm) based on the Rayleigh criterion.
• The study confirms that optimized confocal Raman configurations can differentiate adjacent polymer layers without cross-contamination.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Non-destructive identification and thickness measurement of micron to sub-micron polymer layers.
- High chemical specificity through Raman molecular fingerprints.
- Enhanced quality control, failure analysis, and reverse engineering in laminate manufacturing.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Integration of shorter wavelength lasers and higher numerical aperture optics for sub-0.4 µm resolution.
- Advanced spectral unmixing algorithms to improve discrimination between chemically similar layers.
- Combining confocal Raman mapping with complementary techniques such as SEM for precise dimensional analysis.
Conclusion
Confocal Raman microscopy with proper laser wavelength, objective, and pinhole settings can resolve and chemically identify layers down to 0.4 µm in polymer laminates, approaching theoretical spatial resolution limits.
This method offers significant advantages for quality assurance and materials research in multilayer polymer systems.
Reference
1. Guillory P., Deschaines T., Henson P. Materials Today, 2009, 12(4), 38–39.
2. Rzhevskii A., Ibrahim M., Ramirez J., Macisaac C. Thermo Scientific White Paper 52699, 2015.
3. Guillory P., Deschaines T., Henson P. Thermo Scientific Application Note 51718, 2008.
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