Abstract
Microsphere-based subwavelength imaging technique was first demonstrated in 2011. After nearly a decade of efforts, such technique has spawned numerous interests in fields such as laser nano-machining, imaging, sensing, and biological detection. For wider industrial-scale application of the technique, a robust and low-cost objective lens incorporating a microsphere lens is highly desired and sought by many researchers. In this work, we demonstrate a unibody microscope objective lens formed by tipping a high-index microsphere onto a plano-convex lens and subsequently fitting them into a conventional objective lens. We call this the plano-convex-microsphere (PCM) objective, which resembles the appearance and operation of an ordinary microscope objective while providing super-resolving power in discerning subwavelength 100 nm features ( λ / 4 . 7 ) in air and far-field conditions. The imaging performance of the PCM objective, along with the working distance, has been systematically investigated. It has a calibrated resolution of λ / 3 in the far field, a numerical aperture of 1.57, and a working distance of 3.5 µm. With the assistance of a scanning process, larger-area imaging is realized. The PCM objective can be easily adapted to existing microscope systems and is appealing for commercialization.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Yan, B., Song, Y., Yang, X., Xiong, D., & Wang, Z. (2020). Unibody microscope objective tipped with a microsphere: design, fabrication, and application in subwavelength imaging. Applied Optics, 59(8), 2641. https://doi.org/10.1364/ao.386504
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