Recent advances in synchrotron scattering methods for probing the structure and dynamics of colloids

Adv Colloid Interface Sci. 2024 Mar:325:103114. doi: 10.1016/j.cis.2024.103114. Epub 2024 Feb 22.

Abstract

Recent progress in synchrotron based X-ray scattering methods applied to colloid science is reviewed. An important figure of merit of these techniques is that they enable in situ investigations of colloidal systems under the desired thermophysical and rheological conditions. An ensemble averaged simultaneous structural and dynamical information can be derived albeit in reciprocal space. Significant improvements in X-ray source brilliance and advances in detector technology have overcome some of the limitations in the past. Notably coherent X-ray scattering techniques have become more competitive and they provide complementary information to laboratory based real space methods. For a system with sufficient scattering contrast, size ranges from nm to several μm and time scales down to μs are now amenable to X-ray scattering investigations. A wide variety of sample environments can be combined with scattering experiments further enriching the science that could be pursued by means of advanced X-ray scattering instruments. Some of these recent progresses are illustrated via representative examples. To derive quantitative information from the scattering data, rigorous data analysis or modeling is required. Development of powerful computational tools including the use of artificial intelligence have become the emerging trend.

Keywords: Colloid microstructure and dynamics; Self-assembly pathways; Small-angle X-ray scattering; Ultrasmall-angle X-ray scattering; X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy.