Abstract
The dynamics and structure of the liquid and vapor interface has remained elusive for decades due to the lack of an effective tool for directly visualization beyond micrometer resolution. Here, we designed a simple liquid-cell for encapsulating the liquid state of sodium for transmission electron microscopic (TEM) observation. The real-time dynamic structure of the liquid-vapor interface was imaged and videoed by TEM on the sample of electron irradiated sodium chloride (NaCl) crystals, a well-studied sample with low melting temperature and quantum super-shells of clusters. The nanometer resolution images exhibit the fine structures of the capillary waves, composed of first-time observed three zones of structures and features, i.e. flexible nanoscale fibers, nanoparticles/clusters, and a low-pressure area that sucks the nanoparticles from the liquid to the interface. Although the phenomenons were observed based on irradiated NaCl crystals, the similarities of the phenomenons to predictions suggest our real-time ovserved dynamic structure might be useful in validating long-debated theoretical models of the liquid-vapor interface, and enhancing our knowledge in understanding the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of the liquid-vapor interface to benefit future engineering designs in microfluidics.
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Discover the latest articles, news and stories from top researchers in related subjects.Introduction
Since Gibbs’ fundamental works on thermodynamics a century ago1, many models have been proposed to describe the dynamic structure of the interface between liquid and vapor, which is crucial for our understanding of the important processes in microfluidics, microbiology, and cooling systems for microelectronics2,3. Due to the lack of tools for directly imaging of the interface at nanometer resolution, the study is significantly more hindered than that of the solid state. As a result, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are often used to study the dynamics of the liquid-vapor interface.
Three theoretical models have been proposed to describe the dynamic structure of the liquid-vapor interface. (i) A zero-width capillary-wave model, which is a thin-layer interface model that was developed by Gibbs based on the fundamental theory of thermodynamics, laterly refined by Buff et al.4. In this model, the interface is treated as capillary waves created under surface tension excited by Brownian motion5. (ii) A nonzero-width capillary-wave model, in which the interface has high dynamics and fluctuations within a width that depended on the environments proposed by Weeks et al.6 (iii) A nonzero-width bilayer capillary-wave model5. In this model, the interface was proposed as a non-equilibrium thermodynamic interface, in which the above nonzero-width capillary-wave model was added with a vapor free-path zone. In this zone, the molecules moving towards the liquid surface differed in their velocities from those moving away from the liquid. The highly fluctuating and dynamic capillary wave zone has a width in the order of 10 molecular diameters located on the surface region5,7.
Untill recently, few experiments were conducted to study the interface and validate the theoretical models. For examples, X-ray reflectivity measurements revealed that the liquid-vapor interface exhibits the intrinsic roughness of the surface8, and the capillary waves drastically fluctuate on the surface of water9, as supporting to the nonzero-width capillary-wave model. High-speed synchrotron X-rays are also used to image the defect and molten pool dynamics in situ at hundred micrometer resolution10,11. Nevertheless, the experiments are insufficient to provide the detailed structure with direct imaging of the interface at the nanometer resolution in order to validate the interface models.
Although transmission electron microscopy (TEM) has the capability to image hard materials at atomic resolution, the TEM vacuum column limits the imaging of liquid and vapor samples due to evaporation. To overcome this weakness, scientists recently developed a liquid-cell to encapsulate the liquid, sealing the liquid sample within a small and thin chamber12,13. The sealing materials must be strong enough to encapsulate the liquid under the TEM vacuum and sufficiently transparent to allow TEM beam penetration through for imaging the liquid. The materials often used to observe the chemical reaction and nanoparticle dynamics in liquid include graphene12 and silicon nitride13.
Considering that the dynamic structure of the liquid-vapor interface has never been successfully imaged by TEM, we designed a simple and highly efficient encapsulation technique for real-time TEM imaging of the dynamic structure of the liquid-vapor interface at nanometer resolution. The sample used was liquified sodium (Na) obtained from the electron-irradiated NaCl. The motivations of choosing this sample were that, i) The electron irradiated NaCl crystals has been well-studied decades ago14,15,16; ii) The Na clusters could be generated by the irradiation17; iii) The low molting temperature of Na clusters can be easily achieved within TEM column18; iv) The behaviors of molten Na clusters have been well studied by other techniques, such as differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)19 and wide angle X-ray scattering (WAXS)20; v) Quantum phenomenon have been observed in the clusters of sodium atom21,22,23,24; vi) The phenomenon of electron irradiated NaCl is related to the habitable, possibly even habited, planets searching in space, indicated by factors such as the surface color of the ocean on Europa25,26,27; Under these considerations, TEM images of irradiated NaCl crystals could provide experimental evidence to understand the complexity of the nanoscale clusters and validate the theoretical models of the liquid-vapor interface.
Materials and Methods
Assembly and evaluation of the specimen
The liquid-cell/micro-chamber was produced by sealing the sample between two Formvar plastic films. A NaCl sample (~99.5%) containing ~0.5% calcium silicate (MORTON table salt, Morton Salt Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) was used for the experiment, and a pure NaCl control (~99.999%, Sigma-Aldrich Co., St. Louis, MO, USA; ID: 450006, CAS: 7647-14-5) was used as a control to identify the role of the calcium silicate in the chamber. After dissolving 20 g of each sample in 40 mL of deionized water at room temperature, a ~1 mL aliquot of the saturation solution was collected from the surface into a 1 mL vial after centrifuged at 13,000 rpm for 5 min to separate the undissolved salt crystals from the solution. The saturated solution was then used for experimentation (Fig. 1A).
An aliquot of the ~0.35 μL saturated NaCl solution was pipetted onto the center of a 200-mesh TEM copper pre-coated with a thin Formvar film (Cu-200F, Pacific Grid-Tech, San Francisco, CA, USA) (Fig. 1B). The second Formvar-coated 200-mesh TEM copper grid face-to-face was touched to the solution surface and expanded it to evaporate the solution quickly, generating micron-sized NaCl crystals (Fig. 1C), and then aligned under a light microscope (Fig. 1D). The aligned grids were submitted for compression under a pressure of 12 lb/in2 (~0.8 atm) for ~30 s (Fig. 1E,F). Prior to the removal of the compressive force, the excess solution surrounding the edges of the grids was blotted by filter paper, and then coated with a thin layer of vacuum grease to protect the aligned grids and its containing chamber.
Image and video acquisition
The TEM grids were mounted on a Gatan 626 TEM holder (Fig. 1G). The sample was examined using a Zeiss Libra 120 kV TEM (Fig. 1H). The microscope was operated under 120 kV high-tension with a 20-eV energy filter. The frames were acquired with a 1024 × 1024-pixel OriusSC2006 CCD camera using Gatan Digital Micrograph software. Real-time videos were screen-recorded with Virtual Dub (build 348071 released by Avey Lee) at 2–100 frames per second (fps). After recording, the software of Movie Studio Platinum version 13.0 was used to add scale bars and timers to each video based on the magnifications and frame rates, respectively.
Irradiating and melting of NaCl crystals by electron beam
A high-intensity electron beam was used to melt NaCl crystals with diameters of 1–5 μm (Fig. 1J) under a magnification of ~4,000–40,000 times. While heating the crystals, the crystals began to shrink slightly and then quickly transformed into a free-flowing liquid (Fig. 1K). Rather than quickly evaporating under the high-vacuum column, the free-flowing liquid coexisted with the solid and vapor in the chamber, which lasted for several minutes to over one hour (Fig. 1L). The illumination angles were set to ~1.0 mrad or higher to initially melt the crystals. After a sufficient portion of the crystals was liquefied, the illumination angles were decreased to ~0.2–0.8 mrad to maintain a stable flow of fluid within the chamber (Fig. 1I).
Statistical analysis of the particle motion
To quantitatively evaluate the particle motion, particle displacements and speeds were calculated and plotted. Videos were split into individual frames (in.tiff format) using the Adobe Photoshop 2015 software. Individual frames were then converted to the MRC image format with the proc2d software in the EMAN software package28. Next, the MRC images were stacked into a single file using the newstack software and viewed with eTOMO in the IMOD software package29. After manually tracking the positions of each targeted particle against the markers in each frame, the files containing all of the particle center coordinates at various times were saved and converted into an ASCII file. After being aligned to a common reference, the coordinates were used to calculate and graph the particle mean squared displacement (MSD) values. To calculate the MSD, the trajectory of each representative particle was recorded. The coordinates \(({x}_{i},\,{y}_{i})\) of each particle were measured in sequential time periods (\({t}_{i}\)) with a step of \((\delta t)\) (i.e., one second in our measurement). The squared displacement (\(S{D}_{i}\)) within a time period between \({t}_{i}\) and \({t}_{i}\) + \(\delta t\) was calculated as \(S{D}_{i}={({x}_{i+1}-{x}_{i})}^{2}+{({y}_{i+1}-{y}_{i})}^{2}\). The MSD was calculated as \(MSD=\frac{1}{n}\mathop{\sum }\limits_{i=1}^{n}S{D}_{i}\)30,31,32, and the MSD as a function of a series of time periods was plotted with MICROSOFT EXCEL.
Results
The fluid was generated by the electron beam irradiated NaCl crystals (with 0.5% calcium silicate), which were sandwiched between Formvar plastic films coated on two TEM grids (Fig. 1A–F). To prevent leakage, the circumference of the TEM grids was sealed by vacuum grease. The sample was mounted on a regular TEM holder and examined by a Zeiss Libra 120 TEM under room temperature (Fig. 1G–J).
With the electron beam focused on the crystals, the irradiated crystals shrank, and then turned into fluid (Figs. 1J–L and 2 and Supplementary Video 1). The fluid was mixed with three phenotypes, i.e. clusters of solid particles, liquid and vapor. These three objects can be distinguished based on their distinct contrasts, in which the solid-state particles exhibited the poorest transparency, while the vapor-state presented the highest transparency (Figs. 1K,L and 2). The materials of those objects have been well studied before. For instance, the time-resolved X-ray analysis on the electron irradiated NaCl using TEM energy dispersive spectrometer showed the chlorine (Cl) evaporated as vapor and dispersed into the vacuum as gas, while the Na deposited as solid and liquid diffused to the surrounding17. The result was consistent to early studies, such as that the melting temperatures of the clusters of irradiated Na and NaCl were ~30–40% below the molting temperature of Na (98 °C) based on the measurements from various techniques, including heat capacities18,33, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and atomic force microscopy (AFM)19, X-ray diffraction20, molecular dynamics simulations34, Raman spectra16, and optical-absorption spectroscopy14,15. The low melting temperature of clusters enable us to image the fluid encapsulated by Formvar film (the melting temperature of the Formvar film is ~103–113 °C).
Under an illumination of dose rate ~3,000 e/nm2/s, the irradiated sample exhibited a rapidly fluctuating fluid boundary, filled with clusters of nanoparticles with diameters of ~50–200 nm (yellow lines in Fig. 3A and Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Video 2). One side area of the boundary is more transparent, containing more aggressive motion of the nanoparticles. This area was filled with vapor. In contrast, the opposite side of the boundary was less transparent, filled with nanoparticle moving less aggressively. This area was as filled with liquid. The fluctuating boundary, as the liquid-vapor interface, has a speed of over 300 nm/s (Fig. 3, Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Video 2). In a low magnification, the fluctuating boundaries could be observed forming a closed loop shape within the chamber (Fig. 1K,L), in which two portions of the boundaries were moving independently, and sometimes could cross into and pass through one another, forming an “8” shape (Supplementary Video 2). Occasionally, the middle of the boundary extruded a smaller loop, likely caused by a concave surface of the liquid. Mover, the boundaries never exceeded beyond the chamber edges but can pass over a central “island” (a roundish solid particle clusters in diameter of ~2 μm) freely (Fig. 1J–L and Supplementary Video 2). The above phenomenon suggested the liquid surface within the chamber has a 3D shape and the observed boundaries were that of the liquid surface crossing with the chamber walls (Fig. 1I). The observation of the liquid-vapor interface fluctuation was replicable on different crystals (Fig. 2), and the fluctuation phenomenon can be observed for over one hour (Supplementary Videos 1 and 2). Since the edge of the liquid surface against the chamber wall exhibited high image contrast with structural features, the structure of this boundary was focused on in this study.
In both liquid and vapor, large amounts of nanoparticle clusters were observed undergoing random motion (Supplementary Video 2). To quantitatively identify the motion, we targeted three representative nanoparticles in each side and tracked their trajectories from video frames (Figs. 4 and 5 and Supplementary Videos 3 and 4) to calculate the particle travel distance, instantaneous speeds, and mean square displacements (MSD). Three representative nanoparticles in liquid showed a maximal displacement distance (from the origin) of over ~0.16 μm within 60 s (Fig. 4A,B and Supplementary Video 3). The MSD exhibited a nearly linear association for different time intervals, Δt, from 1 s to 40 s (Fig. 4B), suggesting that the particle motions satisfy the criteria for Brownian motion. The histograms of the instantaneous speeds of each particle resemble Maxwell curves with a relatively consistent peak speed at ~14 nm/s (Fig. 4C).
Particles in vapor exhibited more aggressive motion than particles in liquid. By tracking the trajectories of three representative nanoparticles in vapor, the result showed the particles travelled a maximal displacement distance (from the origin) of over ~1.4 μm within 60 s (Fig. 5A–C and Supplementary Video 4), which was about 9 times greater than that of the particles in the liquid. The MSD-Δt plot also exhibited a nearly linear association for 45 s (Fig. 5D), indicative of Brownian motion. Similarly, the histograms of the instantaneous speeds also resemble Maxwell curves with a relatively similar peak speed of ~90–120 nm/s (Fig. 5E), which were approximately 6–9 times greater than that in liquid. The distinct differences in the maximal travel distance and the peak speed confirmed that these two groups of particles travelled in different mediums, i.e. the particles with lower travel distances and lower average speeds were likely embedded in liquid, whereas the particles with higher travel distances and speeds support that the particles were likely surrounded by vapor.
Under electron irritation, the particles often exhibited collisions (Fig. 6A), fusion (Fig. 6B) and sublimation (Supplementary Video 5). The nanoparticle fusion was often shown in liquid through collisions from random orientations as well as through specific orientations (Fig. 6B) as reported35. Sublimation often occurred in vapor. Increases in sublimation frequency corresponded with more rapid fluctuation of the liquid boundary. Under a specific illumination condition, the aggressive sublimation and rapid flow of the liquid can be dynamically balanced. For example, we observed the liquid spins within the chamber for ~70 cycles in a period of ~3 second/cycle (Fig. 7 and Supplementary Video 6). In each cycle, the phenomenon of liquid flow and sublimation was similar to that in other cycles, i.e. the opaque liquid area containing particle clusters formed a semicircular shape stabilized against a chamber wall beside a central “island” particle. After ~1 s, the liquid began solidify and exhibited less transparency due to the increasing number of large particles (Fig. 7A,B). When the particles grew to ~300 nm in diameter, the liquid was suddenly sprayed out from the original position and pulled into the opposite half of the chamber from the same direction. The flow left the particles behind in their original positions (Supplementary Video 6). While the particles were sublimated gradually, the liquid against the opposite wall began to squeeze together. In the meantime, newly-generated particles began showing up in the liquid (Supplementary Video 6). This process is the first half-cycle of spinning. After stabilizing for ~1 s, the liquid reformed into a semicircular shape filled with regenerated opaque particles. The condition was similar to that of the liquid in the opposite side at the beginning of this cycle. This marks the beginning of the second half of this cycle (Fig. 5A,B). The spinning process in each cycle was essentially similar to each other and the subsequent cycles followed the same pattern for nearly six dozen rounds and lasted for about 4 minutes of observation until we intentionally stopped it due to having recorded sufficient video (Fig. 5C and Supplementary Video 6).
The mechanism of the above liquid spinning phenomenon can be interpreted as a microscale dual-cylinder motor, in which the spinning of the liquid was driven by the electron beam through the processes of nanoparticle generation and sublimation. In brief, the particles act as the source for absorption of the electron beam energy due to their low-transparency property. The over-heated particles quickly turned themselves into vapor via sublimation. The vapor pressure pushed the surround liquid into the opposite half side of the chamber. The continual sublimation of the rest particles generated more vapor and a higher pressure that squeezed the liquid volume, resulting an increased melting temperature of containing particles. The increased melting temperature caused the low-energy molecules/small particles to grow, displayed as the newly-generated solid particles in the liquid. The newly-generated solid particles in the liquid acted as a new source for absorption of the electron beam energy for the next half of cycle. The liquid spinning, microscale dual cylinder motor may inspire future designs of micrometer-scale motors.
Zooming-in on the liquid-vapor boundary at a high magnification under a relatively stable fluctuation condition, the capillary waves showed detailed structural features (Fig. 8, Supplementary Figs. 2–4 and Supplementary Video 7). The most attractive feature was the liquid-vapor interface exhibiting a layer of nanometer-scale fibers, named as the nanofiber zone. The fibers extended from the bulk liquid side toward the vapor side. The fibers have a relatively uniform length of ~30 nm and a width of ~2 nm and were relatively parallel to each other with an average spatial distance of ~2–4 nm (Fig. 8C,D). The fibers oscillated frequently in response to the motions of capillary waves (Supplementary Video 7). The ends of the fibers in the bulk liquid side were relative stable in their positions. Interestingly, other than isolated tiny particles in the liquid (blue arrows indicated in Fig. 8E), a chain of tiny particles in diameter of ~1 nm was visible within each fiber (yellow arrows indicated in Fig. 8C,E, and purple dots in Fig. 8D). In contrast, the opposite end of the filberts swung aggressively, and generally bent toward to large globular particles in diameter ranging from ~10 to ~300 nm in the vapor side. The clusters of those globular particles form a boundary along the liquid-vapor interface (Fig. 8E), named as the nanoparticle cluster zone. On the surface of each globular particle, the tiny particles were often observed along the vapor side of the globular particle surface (purple arrows indicated in Fig. 8E).
Based on the Supplementary Video 7, we found the nanofibers act as a nanoscale conveyor belt for transferring the materials from the bulk liquid side to the vapor side. The transferred materials included the liquid, the tiny particles within the fibers and the clusters that were transferred to the globular particles to contribute to the growth of globular particles in the cluster zone (Fig. 7f and Supplementary Video 7). Notably, once the globular particles grew to approximately 300 nm in diameter, they began to shrink, turned transparent and finally evaporated via sublimation (Supplementary Video 7). Considering the similar size of globular particles observed in the liquid in the above-mentioned spinning phenomenon, the magic number of 300 nm may reflect a balance point between the absorption rate of electron energy and sublimation temperature.
Another unexpected finding from the Supplementary Video 7 was that, once the nanoparticles in the bulk liquid approached the interface within ~50 nm distance, they were suddenly sucked toward the nanofibers (Fig. 9A–C, Supplementary Fig. 5 and Supplementary Video 7). The measurements of the distances, velocities and accelerations of the particles confirmed this observation (Fig. 9D–F). The travel process was so aggressive (>50 nm/s) that nanoparticle shapes were elongated, as a nearby star is stretched out just before it gets sucked into a black hole in outer space. Although, the structure did not show any abnormal feature or contrast within ~50 nm distance from the interface, this sucking phenomenon suggests a low-density gradient zone existing in the bulk liquid, as low-pressure zone. Although this zone was detected in the liquid Na, a similar low-pressure zone has been predicted in molten salt KI by MD simulation36, suggesting the liquid-vapor interface observed from liquid Na may be a general phenomenon of liquid.
The physics behind the trapping phenomenon is unknown. A potential mechanistic explanation was that escaped high energy molecules from liquid to vapor caused a decrease in the average kinetic energy and the local temperature near the capillary wave. The lower temperature turned some low-energy molecules in liquid into the solid phase, as presented by the nanofibers and nanoparticle clusters. The escaped molecules and solidified molecules left some empty space in liquid, which resulted a local low density in the liquid, and the low-density area generated a pressure to the nearby object. The relatively large flowing particles received more force due to its larger surface area. The force pulled the particle in the bulk liquid toward the interface as expressed as the sucking or trapping phenomenon. The more molecules escaping from the liquid surface, the lower the local temperature, the more solidifying molecules, the more liquid flowing to the interface and the greater growth of globular particles in the cluster zone. On the other hand, for the globular particle, the more energy absorbed from the electron beam, and the more aggressive the increase in particle temperature. As the nanoparticle diameter grew to ~300 nm, the temperature become high enough t for sublimation. The sublimation generated a local gas pressure, which pushed the liquid front backwards towards the interface, resulting in a dynamic balance of the interface.
In short, the above observations showed the capillary wave has a rough interface with a thickness of ~300–400 nm (Fig. 10). The interface was composed of three types of structural zones (~50 nm for the vacuum zone, ~30 nm for the nanofiber zone and ~200–300 nm for the cluster zone). This model favors the nonzero-width bilayer capillary-wave models and is consistent with the asymmetric capillary-wave model6, in which nanofibers and rapidly-moving nanoparticles were predicted. However, our model is not consistent with the zero-width elastic capillary-wave models predicted by Gibbs1 and Buff4.
Discussion
The TEM observation on the fluid dynamics for more than an hour benefited from the two materials used to encapsulate the liquid under the vacuum, i.e. Formvar double films and ~0.5% calcium silicate that mixed with the NaCl crystals. To investigate the role of those two materials, we conducted the following three experiments (Supplementary Fig. 6). i) To evaluate the role of calcium silicate, the pure NaCl crystals (~99.999%, without calcium silicate) were used to repeat the experiment. Upon melting, the fluid phenomenon appeared similar to that observed in our experiments (Fig. 2). However, the fluid phenomenon disappeared after a few minutes (Supplementary Fig. 2A), suggesting the calcium silicate in our experiment plays a key role to prevent leakage of the liquid into TEM vacuum. ii) To evaluate the role of Formvar double films, we repeated the experiment by using a single Formvar film (adhered on a holey carbon film of TEM grid) instead of the double films. The same NaCl crystals containing ~0.5% calcium silicate was deposited on the surface of the Formvar film and subjected to TEM imaging of the liquid. During the electron beam irradiation of the crystals, a circular shadow was observed expanding from the irradiated crystal (Supplementary Fig. 2B, indicated by the dashed arc line). Despire observing clusters of particles, the fluid phenomenon was never observed during evaporation. Notably, a shell of the original crystal remained in its original position during the entire process of irradiation, suggesting the calcium silicate mainly coated on the surface of the NaCl crystals (the dashed straight line in Supplementary Fig. 2A). iii) To test whether the surface of the NaCl crystal was coated with calcium silicate, the pure NaCl crystals (~99.999%, without calcium silicate) were deposited on the single Formvar film and then submitted for TEM irradiation. Upon melting the crystals, spherical droplets appeared on the surface of crystals (Supplementary Fig. 2C). Some droplets fused into larger droplets, while some small droplets jumped out from the crystal surface and then quickly burst in the background (Supplementary Fig. 2C). After the whole crystal was evaporated, no shell was left behind. This experiment confirmed the calcium silicate coated on the NaCl crystal surface as a shell, which was consistent to the original design in table salt. In table salt, the calcium silicate was often used as an anticaking agent to prevent the formation of lumps and caking. Considering the fluid phenomenon was only observed by using the double Formvar films regardless of the existence of calcium silicate, the double Formvar films played most important role to seal the liquid. However, since leakage prevents a long imaging time necessary to observe the liquid, the calcium silicate was necessary to secure the shell for over one-hour observation of the sealed liquid.
Although our phenomenon was observed based on the liquid phase of Na, the large common features and characteristics of liquid is consistent to that from other samples. For instance, the studies of lithium chloride (LiCl) and potassium chloride (KCl) molten salts by molecular dynamics (MD) simulations predicted the clusters exhibited in the interface37,38, in which three types of particles were predicted near the interface, i.e. internal particles, surface particles, and virtual chains of particles. These results have strong similarities to our observations of liquid Na. Moreover, the MD studies of molten potassium salt (potassium iodide, KI) demonstrated that the formation of clusters of ions, separated by large spaces of vacuum, can be appreciated at the interface36, which supported the bilayer model5. The vapor free-path zone in bilayer model described the average velocity of the molecules moving towards the liquid is different than that away from liquid5. These descriptions are similar to the observed vacuum zone. Moreover, the surface region of the capillary wave zone, having a width of the order of 10 molecular diameters, is highly variable as a result of thermodynamics5,7, which is similar to our observed nanofiber zone. Additionally, the prediction that the rapidly-moving capillary waves created by surface tension were not fully explainable by Brownian motion5 due to the heavy involvement of phase transitions, is also consistent with our observation. Interestingly, MD simulations studies of a completely different material system also predict similar phenomenon to our observations. For example, the MD studies of argon-like fluid suggested that the transition from liquid to vapor in the interface is locally sharp with great fluctuations39, similar to our observation of nanofiber zone. Surprisingly, the virtual chains of molecules near the interface were also predicted by MD simulations40, which is similar to our observed nanofibers and the chain of ~1 nm nanoparticles within the fibers. In MD simulations, fibers formed rough protrusions, causing capillary waves to act as a membrane41, which was validated by our observed nanofiber zone. The orthogonal experiment by X-ray reflectivity measurements of gas-liquid interactions also validated this prediction. The measurements suggested the surface of an ionic liquid exhibits the intrinsic roughness of the surface8, where a bimolecular layer drastically enhances capillary wave fluctuations on the surface of water9. The large similarities and consistencies of the phenomenon of the liquid-vapor interface suggest that, although our observation was based on electron irradiated NaCl, the phenomenon can reflect the general characters of liquid regardless of the materials.
Conclusion
The real-time imaging of dynamic processes by a regular TEM holder without any special modifications provides a unique approach to enhance the capability of traditional TEM in studying reactions in liquid. The detailed dynamic structure of the liquid-vapor interface validated the theoretical models and provided a unique model. A large amount of new phenomenon may help us understand the thermodynamic principles and fluid behaviors at nanometer scale, which will benefit future microfluidic developments. The implementation of this method to encapsulate other critical materials may assist us to understand the fundamental principles behind nanoparticle interactions, nano-crystallization, metal domain generation, chemical reactions, and multiple phase transitions in future.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Drs. Bhanu P. Jena, Bin Liu, Jinping Li and Jacob Jay for comments and editing of the manuscript. GR was partially supported by the grants from the National Institutes of Health (R01HL115153, and R01GM104427). Work at the Molecular Foundry was supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
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This project was initiated and designed by A.R. and G.R. and then refined by E.W. A.R. and G.R. prepared the TEM samples and/or acquired the data. A.R., D.L. and G.R. processed the data, and D.L. measured the Brownian motions and computed/analyzed the motions of particles. A.R., D.L., M.H., P.A. and G.R. interpreted the data. A.R., D.L. and G.R. drafted the initial manuscript, which was revised by E.W., M.H. and P.A.
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Ren, A., Lu, D., Wong, E. et al. Real-time observation of dynamic structure of liquid-vapor interface at nanometer resolution in electron irradiated sodium chloride crystals. Sci Rep 10, 8596 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-65274-9
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-65274-9
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