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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
- Composites I
- (17c) Dynamics of Solid Microbubble Formation
Toluene is introduced to a low-pressure plasma reactor that is capacitively coupled by a radio frequency generator (13.56 MHz). After formation of plasma particles they are taken to a transmission electron microscope (TEM) that works at 120 kV. Spherical plasma particles with diameter of 500±50 nm start to evolve, first grow and then shrink, over 8 to 12 seconds. Final size of the spherical particles are 1.6±0.6 microns in diameter and the average thickness of the hollow particle shells are 90 nm. We have introduced these particles to a field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM) that works with lower accelerating voltage, 5 kV, and particles showed the same behavior and formed bubbles. These smart particles are even sensitive to other sources of energy such as argon laser that works at 120 mW.