Widefield phototransient imaging for visualizing 3D motion of resonant particles in scattering environments

Identifying, visualising and ultimately tracking dynamically moving non-fluorescent nanoparticles in the presence of non-specific scattering is a long-standing challenge across the nano- and life-sciences. In this work we demonstrate that our recently developed ultrafast holographic transient (UHT)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nanoscale 2022-02, Vol.14 (8), p.362-368
Hauptverfasser: Liebel, Matz, Camargo, Franco V. A, Cerullo, Giulio, van Hulst, Niek F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Identifying, visualising and ultimately tracking dynamically moving non-fluorescent nanoparticles in the presence of non-specific scattering is a long-standing challenge across the nano- and life-sciences. In this work we demonstrate that our recently developed ultrafast holographic transient (UHT) microscope is ideally suited for meeting this challenge. We show that UHT microscopy allows reliably distinguishing off-resonant, dielectric, from resonant, metallic, nanoparticles, based on the phototransient signal: a pre-requisite for single-particle tracking in scattering environments. We then demonstrate the capability of UHT microscopy to holographically localize in 3D single particles over large volumes of view. Ultimately, we combine the two concepts to simultaneously track several tens of freely diffusing gold nanoparticles, within a 110 × 110 × 110 μm volume of view at an integration time of 10 ms per frame, while simultaneously recording their phototransient signals. The combined experimental concepts outlined and validated in this work lay the foundation for background-free 3D single-particle tracking applications or spectroscopy in scattering environments and are immediately applicable to systems as diverse as live cells and tissues or supported heterogeneous catalysts. We show how ultrafast holographic transient microscopy can be used to identify, visualise and 3D track dynamically moving non-fluorescent nanoparticles in large volumes-of-view and in the presence of non-specific scattering background.
ISSN:2040-3364
2040-3372
DOI:10.1039/d1nr06837g