Bond-selective interferometric scattering microscopy
Celalettin Yurdakul, Haonan Zong, Yeran Bai, Ji-Xin Cheng, M. Selim, Unlu

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel bond-selective interferometric scattering microscopy technique that combines mid-infrared photothermal effects with visible interferometry to achieve chemical-specific imaging of individual biological nanoparticles.
Contribution
It presents a new microscopy method integrating mid-IR spectroscopy with interferometric detection for label-free, chemical-specific imaging of micro- and nano-particles.
Findings
Successfully imaged microorganisms with chemical contrast
Demonstrated sub-wavelength resolution with polymer beads
Established a theoretical framework for broader biological applications
Abstract
Interferometric scattering microscopy has been a very promising technology for highly sensitive label-free imaging of a broad spectrum of biological nanoparticles from proteins to viruses in a high-throughput manner. Although it can reveal the specimen's size and shape information, the chemical composition is inaccessible in interferometric measurements. Infrared spectroscopic imaging provides chemical specificity based on inherent chemical bond vibrations of specimens but lacks the ability to image and resolve individual nanoparticles due to long infrared wavelengths. Here, we describe a bond-selective interferometric scattering microscope where the mid-infrared induced photothermal signal is detected by a visible beam in a wide-field common-path interferometry configuration. A thin film layered substrate is utilized to reduce the reflected light and provide a reference field for the…
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