Karolina Kosowska, P. Koziol, D. Liberda, T. Wróbel
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Imaging of Three-dimensional Orientation of Molecules in Polymers Using FT-IR, Raman, and O-PTIR Microspectroscopies
Extended Abstract Fourier transform infrared microspectroscopy (FT-IR) is a nondestructive, information-rich, and label-free technique successfully applied for years in material science. The introduction of linear polarization enriches the technique with the possibility of studying the orientation of macromolecules. Until now, experiments focused on using the absorbance of a single band to retrieve the in-plane orientation and the degree of order. The extended four-polarization (4P) method, which enables the visualization of the macromolecule orientation regardless of the choice of the direction of polarization, was proposed by Hikima et al. for polymers [1]. The application of IR imaging with 4P on heterogeneous structure, human tissue microarrays, was presented for the first time by our team in 2020 [2], [3]. A deeper characterization of the sample structure is the next step. Simultaneous analysis of two bands of roughly perpendicular transition moment orientations was proposed by Lee in 2018 as a method of determining the orientation of the molecule in three-dimensional space [4]. The first application of “concurrent analysis” (4P-3D) to