Confocal Raman Microscopy with Adaptive Optics
Confocal Raman microscopy, a highly specific and label-free technique for the microscale study of thick samples, often presents difficulties due to weak Raman signals. Inhomogeneous samples introduce wavefront aberrations that further reduce these signals, requiring even longer acquisition times. In...
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Zusammenfassung: | Confocal Raman microscopy, a highly specific and label-free technique for the
microscale study of thick samples, often presents difficulties due to weak
Raman signals. Inhomogeneous samples introduce wavefront aberrations that
further reduce these signals, requiring even longer acquisition times. In this
study, we introduce adaptive optics to confocal Raman microscopy for the first
time to counteract such aberrations, significantly increasing the Raman signal
and image quality. The method is designed to integrate seamlessly with existing
commercial microscopes without hardware modifications. It uses a wavefront
sensorless approach to derive aberrations using an optofluidic, transmissive
spatial light modulator that can be attached to the microscope nosepiece. Our
experimental results demonstrate the compensation of aberrations caused by
artificial scatterers and mouse brain tissue, improving spatial resolution and
achieving up to 3.5-fold signal enhancements. Our results provide a basis for
the molecular label-free study of biological systems at greater imaging depths. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.08725 |