Three-dimensional spatiotemporal tracking of nano-objects diffusing in water-filled optofluidic microstructured fiber

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Abstract

Three-dimensional (3D) tracking of nano-objects represents a novel pathway for understanding dynamic nanoscale processes within bioanalytics and life science. Here we demonstrate 3D tracking of diffusing 100 nm gold nanosphere within a water-filled optofluidic fiber via elastic light scattering-based position retrieval. Specifically, the correlation between intensity and position inside a region of a fiber-integrated microchannel has been used to decode the axial position from the scattered intensity, while image processing-based tracking was used in the image plane. The 3D trajectory of a diffusing gold nanosphere has been experimentally determined, while the determined diameter analysis matches expectations. Beside key advantages such as homogenous light-line illumination, low-background scattering, long observation time, large number of frames, high temporal and spatial resolution and compatibility with standard microscope, the particular properties of operating with water defines a new bioanalytical platform that is highly relevant for medical and life science applications.

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Jiang, S., Förster, R., Plidschun, M., Kobelke, J., Fatobene Ando, R., & Schmidt, M. A. (2020). Three-dimensional spatiotemporal tracking of nano-objects diffusing in water-filled optofluidic microstructured fiber. Nanophotonics, 9(15), 4545–4554. https://doi.org/10.1515/nanoph-2020-0330

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