Multi-modal microscopy imaging with the OpenFlexure Delta Stage
Samuel McDermott, Filip Ayazi, Joel Collins, Joe Knapper, Julian, Stirling, Richard Bowman, and Pietro Cicuta

TL;DR
The paper introduces the OpenFlexure Delta Stage, a low-cost, open-source, 3D-printed microscope capable of automated, multi-modal imaging, designed to increase accessibility for researchers worldwide, especially in lower-income countries.
Contribution
It presents a versatile, open-source, 3D-printed microscope with automated capabilities, enabling complex imaging in resource-limited settings.
Findings
Successfully imaged biological and non-biological samples in various modes
Designed for easy implementation and modularity
Promotes global research collaboration and reproducibility
Abstract
Microscopes are vital pieces of equipment in much of biological research and medical diagnostics. However, access to a microscope can represent a bottleneck in research, especially in lower-income countries. `Smart' computer controlled motorized microscopes, which can perform automated routines or acquire images in a range of modalities are even more expensive and inaccessible. Developing low-cost, open-source, smart microscopes enables more researchers to conceive and execute optimized or more complex experiments. Here we present the OpenFlexure Delta Stage, a 3D-printed microscope designed for researchers. Powered by the OpenFlexure software stack, it is capable of performing automated experiments. The design files and assembly instructions are freely available under an open licence. Its intuitive and modular design -- along with detailed documentation -- allows researchers to…
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