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Shull Group Publications: #96
96. "Membrane-enhanced surface acoustic wave analysis
of grafted polymer brushes" Brass, D.A.; Shull, K.R., J. Appl. Phys.,
103, 073517 (2008).
Abstract: An analysis is developed for the frequency response of a quartz
crystal resonator (often referred to as a quartz crystal microbalance) that
is modified with a grafted solvent-swollen polymer brush and placed in contact
with a membrane capping layer. The shear wave generated at the resonator surface
couples into the membrane layer with an efficiency that is strongly dependent
on the thickness of the swollen brush layer. As a result, the resonant frequency
changes by a maximum amount that is closely approximated by the Sauerbrey shift
for the capping layer. The calculated shift substantially decreases for increases
in the brush thickness of approximately 10 nm, which gives a net frequency
response that is extremely sensitive to the degree of swelling of the polymer
brush. An optimum capping layer thickness is determined by balancing the Sauerbrey
shift against dissipative effects that weaken the crystal resonance. This optimum
membrane thickness depends only weakly on the properties of the membrane material
and is in the micron range. Detailed multilayer calculations are presented
for the specific case of a poly(ethylene glycol) brush swollen with water and
brought into contact with an elastomeric water-permeable membrane. These calculations
confirm that the method is sensitive to the properties of the brush layer in
the experimentally relevant thickness regime. Connections are also made to
conceptually simpler two and three layer models of the acoustic impedance of
the material systems that are brought into contact with the resonator.
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