Study of molecular orientation by vibrational spectroscopy: From polymers to silk

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Abstract

Infrared and Raman spectroscopies are very efficient techniques to characterize molecular orientation in macromolecular systems. In the present paper, two examples of the application of vibrational spectroscopy to the study of molecular orientation in synthetic and natural macromolecules will be presented. In the first example, the dynamics of orientation and relaxation of stretched films of bimodal blends of polystyrene (PS) and deuterated polystyrene (dPS) has been studied in situ by polarization modulation infrared linear dichroism while, in the second one, polarized Raman microspectroscopy has been used to determined quantitatively the orientation of ß-sheet domains in single filaments of Bombyx mori silk. © 2005 International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.

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Pellerin, C., Rousseau, M. E., Côté, M., & Pézolet, M. (2005). Study of molecular orientation by vibrational spectroscopy: From polymers to silk. In Macromolecular Symposia (Vol. 220, pp. 85–98). https://doi.org/10.1002/masy.200550207

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