ATR-FTIR for Nanoparticle Surface Characterization: A Technical Overview

Principles of ATR-FTIR

Attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR) relies on total internal reflection of an infrared beam through a high-refractive-index crystal. The evanescent wave penetrates a short distance into the sample in contact with the crystal, typically 0.5 to 5 micrometers depending on wavelength and crystal material. This shallow penetration makes ATR-FTIR inherently surface-sensitive.

The penetration depth (dp) follows the Harrick equation:

dp = λ / [2π n1 (sin²θ – (n2/n1)²)^½]

where λ is wavelength, n1 is crystal refractive index, n2 is sample refractive index, and θ is incidence angle.

Wavenumber (cm⁻¹) Penetration Depth (μm)
4000 1.6
1000 6.4

Values calculated for diamond crystal (n1=2.4), organic sample (n2≈1.5), 45° incidence.

Critical Measurement Parameters

  • Pressure: 50–100 psi ensures intimate contact without damaging crystal or altering nanoparticle properties.
  • Excessive pressure may cause particle deformation or surface chemistry changes.
  • Insufficient pressure leads to poor contact and spectral artifacts.
  • For liquid suspensions, controlled pressure prevents meniscus formation.

Advantages Over Transmission FTIR

  • Direct measurement of nanoparticle powders without KBr pellet preparation.
  • Eliminates matrix interactions that can obscure surface features.
  • Enables analysis of liquid suspensions without solvent evaporation artifacts.
  • Reduced scattering artifacts from nanoparticle aggregation during pellet preparation.
  • Reproducible sampling geometry improves quantitative reliability.

Case Studies Demonstrating Superiority

Platinum nanoparticles on alumina: Transmission FTIR failed to detect surface-adsorbed CO due to strong bulk absorption from the support. ATR-FTIR clearly identified linear CO at 2080 cm⁻¹ and bridged CO at 1850 cm⁻¹.

Titanium dioxide nanoparticles: Transmission measurements showed broad water bands obscuring surface hydroxyl signatures. ATR-FTIR resolved distinct Ti-OH stretching modes at 3675 cm⁻¹ and 3715 cm⁻¹ corresponding to different crystallographic faces.

Quantitative Analysis and Reproducibility

Studies on amine-functionalized silica nanoparticles achieved relative standard deviations below 5% for NH stretching band intensities using ATR-FTIR, compared to 15–20% variability in transmission measurements. The consistent contact area provides reliable intensity data for surface coverage calculations.

Limitations and Considerations

  • Penetration depth may probe multiple nanoparticle layers in densely packed samples; monolayer deposition can mitigate this.
  • Spectral distortions from anomalous dispersion near strong absorption bands affect band shapes and penetration depth calculations.
  • Nanoparticles with strong surface plasmon resonances require careful data interpretation.

Recent Advancements and Applications

  • Micro-ATR with spot sizes below 100 μm enables localized analysis of nanoparticle deposits.
  • Imaging ATR-FTIR provides chemical maps of surface heterogeneity.
  • Flow cells allow real-time monitoring of surface reactions in liquid media.
  • Temperature-controlled stages facilitate stability studies under controlled conditions.

The technique applies to metals, metal oxides, polymers, and carbon-based nanoparticles. Applications include environmental contaminant adsorption studies on iron oxide nanoparticles, pharmaceutical coating analysis on polymeric nanoparticles, and industrial quality control for surface modification verification.