16 research outputs found
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Lock-in detection of photoacoustic feedback signal for focusing through scattering media using wave-front shaping.
Wave-front shaping techniques enable focusing and imaging through scattering media. Unfortunately, most approaches require invasive feedback inside or behind the sample, or use of spatial correlations (memory effect) limiting the application to specific types of samples. Recent approaches overcome these limitations by taking advantage of acoustic waves via the photoacoustic (PA) effect or via photon tagging. We present a fully analog signal processing lock-in scheme for PA detection to improve focusing through scattering media and to efficiently extract nonlinear photoacoustic signals towards wave-front optimization. Our implementation improves PA feedback performance in terms of SNR, speed, and resolution
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Material anisotropy as a degree of freedom in optical design.
We present an approach for the design of refractive optical elements using materials degrees of freedom that are accessible via engineered materials. Starting from first principles and an unconstrained general material, we specify homogeneous refractive lenses that focus light with diffraction-limited resolution resulting from a tailored anisotropic refractive index. We analyze the performance, physical feasibility, and advantages over isotropic lenses. Materials degrees of freedom enable new flexibility for imaging system designs with lower complexity expanding the existing aspheric and graded index paradigms
Roadmap on label-free super-resolution imaging
Label-free super-resolution (LFSR) imaging relies on light-scattering processes in nanoscale objects without a need for fluorescent (FL) staining required in super-resolved FL microscopy. The objectives of this Roadmap are to present a comprehensive vision of the developments, the state-of-the-art in this field, and to discuss the resolution boundaries and hurdles that need to be overcome to break the classical diffraction limit of the label-free imaging. The scope of this Roadmap spans from the advanced interference detection techniques, where the diffraction-limited lateral resolution is combined with unsurpassed axial and temporal resolution, to techniques with true lateral super-resolution capability that are based on understanding resolution as an information science problem, on using novel structured illumination, near-field scanning, and nonlinear optics approaches, and on designing superlenses based on nanoplasmonics, metamaterials, transformation optics, and microsphere-assisted approaches. To this end, this Roadmap brings under the same umbrella researchers from the physics and biomedical optics communities in which such studies have often been developing separately. The ultimate intent of this paper is to create a vision for the current and future developments of LFSR imaging based on its physical mechanisms and to create a great opening for the series of articles in this field
Roadmap on Label-Free Super-resolution Imaging
Label-free super-resolution (LFSR) imaging relies on light-scattering processes in nanoscale objects without a need for fluorescent (FL) staining required in super-resolved FL microscopy. The objectives of this Roadmap are to present a comprehensive vision of the developments, the state-of-the-art in this field, and to discuss the resolution boundaries and hurdles that need to be overcome to break the classical diffraction limit of the label-free imaging. The scope of this Roadmap spans from the advanced interference detection techniques, where the diffraction-limited lateral resolution is combined with unsurpassed axial and temporal resolution, to techniques with true lateral super-resolution capability that are based on understanding resolution as an information science problem, on using novel structured illumination, near-field scanning, and nonlinear optics approaches, and on designing superlenses based on nanoplasmonics, metamaterials, transformation optics, and microsphere-assisted approaches. To this end, this Roadmap brings under the same umbrella researchers from the physics and biomedical optics communities in which such studies have often been developing separately. The ultimate intent of this paper is to create a vision for the current and future developments of LFSR imaging based on its physical mechanisms and to create a great opening for the series of articles in this field.Peer reviewe
Recommended from our members
Lock-in detection of photoacoustic feedback signal for focusing through scattering media using wave-front shaping
Wave-front shaping techniques enable focusing and imaging through scattering media. Unfortunately, most approaches require invasive feedback inside or behind the sample, or use of spatial correlations (memory effect) limiting the application to specific types of samples. Recent approaches overcome these limitations by taking advantage of acoustic waves via the photoacoustic (PA) effect or via photon tagging. We present a fully analog signal processing lock-in scheme for PA detection to improve focusing through scattering media and to efficiently extract nonlinear photoacoustic signals towards wave-front optimization. Our implementation improves PA feedback performance in terms of SNR, speed, and resolution
Super-Resolution in Label-Free Photomodulated Reflectivity
We demonstrate a new, label-free,
far-field super-resolution method based on an ultrafast pumpâprobe
scheme oriented toward nanomaterial imaging. A focused pump laser
excites a diffraction-limited spatial temperature profile, and the
nonlinear changes in reflectance are probed. Enhanced spatial resolution
is demonstrated with nanofabricated silicon and vanadium dioxide nanostructures.
Using an air objective, resolution of 105 nm was achieved, well beyond
the diffraction limit for the pump and probe beams and offering a
novel kind of dedicated nanoscopy for materials
Super-Resolution in Label-Free Photomodulated Reflectivity
We demonstrate a new, label-free,
far-field super-resolution method based on an ultrafast pumpâprobe
scheme oriented toward nanomaterial imaging. A focused pump laser
excites a diffraction-limited spatial temperature profile, and the
nonlinear changes in reflectance are probed. Enhanced spatial resolution
is demonstrated with nanofabricated silicon and vanadium dioxide nanostructures.
Using an air objective, resolution of 105 nm was achieved, well beyond
the diffraction limit for the pump and probe beams and offering a
novel kind of dedicated nanoscopy for materials
Excited-State Proton Transfer and Proton Diffusion near Hydrophilic Surfaces
Time-resolved emission techniques
were employed to study the reversible proton photoprotolytic properties
of surface-attached 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonate (HPTS) molecules
to hydrophilic alumina and silica surfaces. We found that the excited-state
proton transfer rate of the surface-linked HPTS molecules, in H<sub>2</sub>O and D<sub>2</sub>O, is nearly the same as of HPTS in the
bulk, while the corresponding recombination rate is significantly
greater. Using the diffusion-assisted proton geminate-recombination
model, we found that the best fit of the time-resolved fluorescence
(TRF) signal is obtained by invoking a two-dimensional diffusion space
for the proton to recombine with the conjugated basic form, RO<sup>â</sup>*, of the surface-linked HPTS. However, we obtain an
excellent fit by a three-dimensional diffusion space for diffusional
HPTS in bulk water. These results indicate that the photoejected solvated
protons are confined to the surface for long periods of time. We suggest
two plausible mechanisms responsible for two-dimensional proton diffusion
next to hydrophilic surfaces