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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Compact, cost-effective and field-portable microscope prototype based on MISHELF microscopy

José ÁNgel Picazo-buenoLuis GraneroJavier GarciaMartín SanzVicente Micó

subject

Conventional transmission electron microscopeDiffractionMultidisciplinaryMicroscopeComputer sciencebusiness.industryComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONHolographyImage processing02 engineering and technology021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciencesArticleInterference microscopylaw.invention010309 opticsOpticslaw0103 physical sciencesPhase imagingMicroscopyMiniaturization0210 nano-technologybusiness

description

AbstractWe report on a reduced cost, portable and compact prototype design of lensless holographic microscope with an illumination/detection scheme based on wavelength multiplexing, working with single hologram acquisition and using a fast convergence algorithm for image processing. All together, MISHELF (initials coming from Multi-Illumination Single-Holographic-Exposure Lensless Fresnel) microscopy allows the recording of three Fresnel domain diffraction patterns in a single camera snap-shot incoming from illuminating the sample with three coherent lights at once. Previous implementations have proposed an illumination/detection procedure based on a tuned (illumination wavelengths centered at the maximum sensitivity of the camera detection channels) configuration but here we report on a detuned (non-centered ones) scheme resulting in prototype miniaturization and cost reduction. Thus, MISHELF microscopy in combination with a novel and fast iterative algorithm allows high-resolution (μm range) phase-retrieved (twin image elimination) quantitative phase imaging of dynamic events (video rate recording speed). The performance of this microscope prototype is validated through experiments using both amplitude (USAF resolution test) and complex (live swine sperm cells and flowing microbeads) samples. The proposed method becomes in an alternative instrument improving some capabilities of existing lensless microscopes.

https://doi.org/10.1038/srep43291