Luminescent surfaces with tailored angular emission for compact dark-field imaging devices

Dark-field microscopy is a standard imaging technique widely employed in biology that provides high image contrast for a broad range of unstained specimens 1 . Unlike bright-field microscopy, it accentuates high spatial frequencies and can therefore be used to emphasize and resolve small features. H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature photonics 2020-05, Vol.14 (5), p.310-315
Hauptverfasser: Chazot, Cécile A. C., Nagelberg, Sara, Rowlands, Christopher J., Scherer, Maik R. J., Coropceanu, Igor, Broderick, Kurt, Kim, Yunjo, Bawendi, Moungi G., So, Peter T. C., Kolle, Mathias
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dark-field microscopy is a standard imaging technique widely employed in biology that provides high image contrast for a broad range of unstained specimens 1 . Unlike bright-field microscopy, it accentuates high spatial frequencies and can therefore be used to emphasize and resolve small features. However, the use of dark-field microscopy for reliable analysis of blood cells, bacteria, algae and other marine organisms often requires specialized, bulky microscope systems, as well as expensive additional components, such as dark-field-compatible objectives or condensers 2 , 3 . Here, we propose to simplify and downsize dark-field microscopy equipment by generating the high-angle illumination cone required for dark-field microscopy directly within the sample substrate. We introduce a luminescent photonic substrate with a controlled angular emission profile and demonstrate its ability to generate high-contrast dark-field images of micrometre-sized living organisms using standard optical microscopy equipment. This new type of substrate forms the basis for miniaturized lab-on-chip dark-field imaging devices that are compatible with simple and compact light microscopes. A luminescent photonic substrate with a controlled angular emission profile is introduced and its ability to generate high-contrast dark-field images of micrometre-sized living organisms is demonstrated using standard optical microscopy equipment.
ISSN:1749-4885
1749-4893
DOI:10.1038/s41566-020-0593-1