Determining Microscopic Viscoelasticity in Flexible and Semiflexible Polymer Networks from Thermal Fluctuations
B. Schnurr, F. Gittes, F.C. MacKintosh, and C.F. Schmidt

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel laser interferometry technique to measure local viscoelastic properties of soft polymer networks by analyzing thermal fluctuations of embedded probe particles across a broad frequency range.
Contribution
The authors developed a non-invasive method to determine microscopic viscoelasticity in soft materials, applicable to biopolymer networks, with high spatial and frequency resolution.
Findings
Measured shear moduli of actin solutions near elastic plateau.
Quantified plateau moduli of polyacrylamide gels at various concentrations.
Observed scaling behaviors consistent with theoretical models for flexible and semiflexible polymers.
Abstract
We have developed a new technique to measure viscoelasticity in soft materials such as polymer solutions, by monitoring thermal fluctuations of embedded probe particles using laser interferometry in a microscope. Interferometry allows us to obtain power spectra of fluctuating beads from 0.1 Hz to 20 kHz, and with sub-nanometer spatial resolution. Using linear response theory, we determined the frequency-dependent loss and storage shear moduli up to frequencies on the order of a kHz. Our technique measures local values of the viscoelastic response, without actively straining the system, and is especially suited to soft biopolymer networks. We studied semiflexible F-actin solutions and, as a control, flexible polyacrylamide (PAAm) gels, the latter close to their gelation threshold. With small particles, we could probe the transition from macroscopic viscoelasticity to more complex…
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