Anti-aging skincare seen through collagen fibres organisation
Novitom has developed an original test based on the analysis of the quality of the organisation of collagen fibres. Collagen,…
Home » Technical means » X-ray diffraction and scattering » Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS)
Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a technique used to study the structure of materials containing nanometer-sized particles. It can be used with samples in liquid, semi-solid, or solid forms.
SAXS provides detailed insights into how these particles are distributed, their size, shape, and surface characteristics. It can also track changes in the material’s microstructure over time, with precision ranging from less than a nanometer up to a micron, and even capturing events that happen in less than a second.
SAXS is a powerful technique for characterizing gels, emulsions, nanoparticle suspensions, or porous materials, regardless of their opacity to visible light.
The interpretation and quantitative analysis of SAXS scattering data rely on structural models that simulate the scattering signal and fit it to the experimental SAXS data. Additional analyses using other techniques or by varying conditions (such as temperature, concentration, etc.) may be necessary to resolve certain ambiguities.
Novitom has developed an original test based on the analysis of the quality of the organisation of collagen fibres. Collagen,…
Laboratory or synchrotron equipment (Laboratory setups are more accessible, while synchrotron sources offer higher performance).
Microscopie à force atomique (AFM)
Microscopie électronique à balayage basse tension (SEM-FEG)
Microtomographie rayons-X (µCT)
Fluorescence rayons-X en microfaisceaux (µXRF)
Spectroscopies infrarouge (FT-IR)
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