| Literature DB >> 35966035 |
Haonan Zong1, Celalettin Yurdakul1, Yeran Bai1, Meng Zhang2, M Selim Ünlü3, Ji-Xin Cheng3.
Abstract
Mid-infrared photothermal (MIP) microscopy has been a promising label-free chemical imaging technique for functional characterization of specimens owing to its enhanced spatial resolution and high specificity. Recently developed wide-field MIP imaging modalities have drastically improved speed and enabled high-throughput imaging of micron-scale subjects. However, the weakly scattered signal from subwavelength particles becomes indistinguishable from the shot-noise as a consequence of the strong background light, leading to limited sensitivity. Here, we demonstrate background-suppressed chemical fingerprinting at a single nanoparticle level by selectively attenuating the reflected light through pupil engineering in the collection path. Our technique provides over 3 orders of magnitude background suppression by quasi-darkfield illumination in the epi-configuration without sacrificing lateral resolution. We demonstrate 6-fold signal-to-background noise ratio improvement, allowing for simultaneous detection and discrimination of hundreds of nanoparticles across a field of view of 70 μm × 70 μm. A comprehensive theoretical framework for photothermal image formation is provided and experimentally validated with 300 and 500 nm PMMA beads. The versatility and utility of our technique are demonstrated via hyperspectral dark-field MIP imaging of S. aureus and E. coli bacteria and MIP imaging of subcellular lipid droplets inside C. albicans and cancer cells.Entities:
Keywords: bacteria detection; biosensing; chemical imaging; infrared spectroscopy; nanoparticle detection; photothermal imaging
Year: 2021 PMID: 35966035 PMCID: PMC9373987 DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.1c01197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Photonics ISSN: 2330-4022 Impact factor: 7.077