Victor Marin-Lizarraga , Raúl Rodríguez-García , Jose L Garcia-Cordero , Daniel May-Arrioja , Clelia De-la-Peña , Luis David Patiño-López
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Lensless imaging fluorescence applications are limited by the unavoidable trade-off between the object-sensor distance and the excitation light attenuation at the detection plane. Indeed, a shorter object-sensor distance reduces the spreading of fluorescent signals but at the cost of losing excitation light attenuation provided by filter thickness. Accordingly, the combination of four synergistic pathways to attain further attenuation of excitation light is proposed: the optimization of total internal reflection by microfluidic chip geometry modification, cross-polarization extinction, interchangeable absorption longpass filters, and the CMOS sensor built-in bandpass Bayer filters. The advantages of such a combined setup are demonstrated with a microfluidic application, as we managed to keep the object-sensor distance as short as 600 µm and still distinguish the fluorescence of individual droplets, flowing as close as 650 µm to each other, while attenuating excitation light to an OD 5.9 level. This approach also allowed simultaneous fluorescence and bright-field observation of on-chip droplet fluorescence during flow at a rate of 30 fps. The enhanced capabilities in our scheme pave the way to further lensless fluorescence applications requiring parallelism, lower detection thresholds, and real-time acquisition, such as fluorescence biosensing.
期刊介绍:
Optics and Lasers in Engineering aims at providing an international forum for the interchange of information on the development of optical techniques and laser technology in engineering. Emphasis is placed on contributions targeted at the practical use of methods and devices, the development and enhancement of solutions and new theoretical concepts for experimental methods.
Optics and Lasers in Engineering reflects the main areas in which optical methods are being used and developed for an engineering environment. Manuscripts should offer clear evidence of novelty and significance. Papers focusing on parameter optimization or computational issues are not suitable. Similarly, papers focussed on an application rather than the optical method fall outside the journal''s scope. The scope of the journal is defined to include the following:
-Optical Metrology-
Optical Methods for 3D visualization and virtual engineering-
Optical Techniques for Microsystems-
Imaging, Microscopy and Adaptive Optics-
Computational Imaging-
Laser methods in manufacturing-
Integrated optical and photonic sensors-
Optics and Photonics in Life Science-
Hyperspectral and spectroscopic methods-
Infrared and Terahertz techniques