Data di Pubblicazione:
2019
Abstract:
Active thermal imaging is a valuable tool for the nondestructive characterization of the
morphological properties and the functional state of biological tissues and synthetic materials.
However, state-of-the-art techniques do not typically combine the required high spatial
resolution over extended fields of view with the quantification of temperature variations.
Here, we demonstrate quantitative far-infrared photo-thermal imaging at sub-diffraction
resolution over millimeter-sized fields of view. Our approach combines the sample absorption
of modulated raster-scanned laser light with the automated localization of the laser-induced
temperature variations imaged by a thermal camera. With temperature increments
∼0.5–5 °C, we achieve a six-time gain with respect to our 350-μm diffraction-limited resolution
with proof-of-principle experiments on synthetic samples. We finally demonstrate the
biological relevance of sub-diffraction thermal imaging by retrieving temperature-based
super-resolution maps of the distribution of Prussian blue nanocubes across explanted
murine skin biopsies.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
photothermal effect, imaging techniques, prussian blue
Elenco autori:
Bouzin, M.; Marini, M.; Zeynali, A.; Borzenkov, M.; Sironi, L.; D'Alfonso, L.; Mingozzi, F.; Granucci, F.; Pallavicini, P.; Chirico, G.; Collini, M.
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