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Polarization-modulated second harmonic generation ellipsometric microscopy at video rate
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Polarization-modulated second harmonic generation ellipsometric microscopy at video rate

Emma L DeWalt, Shane Z Sullivan, Paul D Schmitt, Ryan D Muir and Garth J Simpson
Analytical chemistry (Washington), Vol.86(16), pp.8448-8456
19/08/2014
PMID: 25050448

Abstract

Aldose-Ketose Isomerases - chemistry Aldose-Ketose Isomerases - ultrastructure Algorithms Crystallization Equipment Design Microscopy, Polarization - instrumentation Microscopy, Polarization - methods Microscopy, Video - instrumentation Microscopy, Video - methods Naproxen - chemistry
Fast 8 MHz polarization modulation coupled with analytical modeling, fast beam-scanning, and synchronous digitization (SD) have enabled simultaneous nonlinear optical Stokes ellipsometry (NOSE) and polarized laser transmittance imaging with image acquisition rates up to video rate. In contrast to polarimetry, in which the polarization state of the exiting beam is recorded, NOSE enables recovery of the complex-valued Jones tensor of the sample that describes all polarization-dependent observables of the measurement. Every video-rate scan produces a set of 30 images (10 for each detector with three detectors operating in parallel), each of which corresponds to a different polarization-dependent result. Linear fitting of this image set contracts it down to a set of five parameters for each detector in second harmonic generation (SHG) and three parameters for the transmittance of the incident beam. These parameters can in turn be used to recover the Jones tensor elements of the sample. Following validation of the approach using z-cut quartz, NOSE microscopy was performed for microcrystals of both naproxen and glucose isomerase. When weighted by the measurement time, NOSE microscopy was found to provide a substantial (>7 decades) improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio relative to our previous measurements based on the rotation of optical elements and a 3-fold improvement relative to previous single-point NOSE approaches.
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https://doi.org/10.1021/ac502124vView
Published (Version of record) Open

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