Chip-based wide field-of-view nanoscopy

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Abstract

Present optical nanoscopy techniques use a complex microscope for imaging and a simple glass slide to hold the sample. Here, we demonstrate the inverse: the use of a complex, but mass-producible optical chip, which hosts the sample and provides a waveguide for the illumination source, and a standard low-cost microscope to acquire super-resolved images via two different approaches. Waveguides composed of a material with high refractive-index contrast provide a strong evanescent field that is used for single-molecule switching and fluorescence excitation, thus enabling chip-based single-molecule localization microscopy. Additionally, multimode interference patterns induce spatial fluorescence intensity variations that enable fluctuation-based super-resolution imaging. As chip-based nanoscopy separates the illumination and detection light paths, total-internal-reflection fluorescence excitation is possible over a large field of view, with up to 0.5 mm × 0.5 mm being demonstrated. Using multicolour chip-based nanoscopy, we visualize fenestrations in liver sinusoidal endothelial cells.

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Diekmann, R., Helle, Ø. I., Øie, C. I., McCourt, P., Huser, T. R., Schüttpelz, M., & Ahluwalia, B. S. (2017). Chip-based wide field-of-view nanoscopy. Nature Photonics, 11(5), 322–328. https://doi.org/10.1038/nphoton.2017.55

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