The detection and characterization of lateral heterogeneities or domains in lipid mixtures has attracted considerable interest,
because of the roles that such domains may play in biological function. Studies on both model and cell membranes demonstrate
that domains can be formed over a wide range of length scales, as small as nanometers in diameter up to microns. However,
although the size and shape of micron-sized domains are readily visualized in freely suspended vesicles, by techniques such
as fluorescence microscopy, imaging of nanometer-sized domains has thus far been performed only on substrate-supported membranes
(through, e.g., atomic force microscopy), whereas additional evidence for nanodomains has depended on indirect detection (through,
e.g., nuclear magnetic resonance or fluorescence resonance energy transfer). Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) is a technique
able to characterize structural features on nanometer length scales and can be used to probe freely suspended membranes. As
such, SANS shows promise to characterize nanometer-sized domains in model membranes. The authors have recently demonstrated
the efficacy of SANS to detect and characterize nanodomains in freely suspended mixed lipid vesicles.