Electromechanical Imaging of Biological Systems with Sub-10 nm Resolution
Electromechanical Imaging of Biological Systems with Sub-10 nm Resolution
Electromechanical imaging of tooth dentin and enamel has been performed with sub-10 nm resolution using piezoresponse force microscopy. Characteristic piezoelectric domain size and local protein fiber ordering in dentin have been determined. The shape of a single collagen fibril in enamel is visualized in real space and local hysteresis loops are measured. Because of the ubiquitous presence of piezoelectricity in biological systems, this approach is expected to find broad application in high-resolution studies of a wide range of biomaterials.
T. Thundat、B. J. Rodriguez、S. Jesse、A. Gruverman、Sergei V. Kalinin
生物物理学生物科学现状、生物科学发展生物科学研究方法、生物科学研究技术
T. Thundat,B. J. Rodriguez,S. Jesse,A. Gruverman,Sergei V. Kalinin.Electromechanical Imaging of Biological Systems with Sub-10 nm Resolution[EB/OL].(2005-04-10)[2025-08-07].https://arxiv.org/abs/cond-mat/0504232.点此复制
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