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Lensless wide-field fluorescent imaging on a chip using compressive decoding of sparse objects

Source: Opt. Express 18, 10510 (2010); doi:10.1364/OE.18.010510

Issue Date: 15 August 2010

PACS
  • 42.79.Pw
    Imaging detectors and sensors
  • 87.64.M-
    Optical microscopy in biophysics and medical physics
  • 87.64.kv
    Fluorescence spectroscopy in biophysics and medical physics
  • YEAR: 2010
PUBLICATION DATA
ISSN:
1553-9628 (online)
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef OSA
We demonstrate the use of a compressive sampling algorithm for on-chip fluorescent imaging of sparse objects over an ultra-large field-of-view (>8 cm2) without the need for any lenses or mechanical scanning. In this lensfree imaging technique, fluorescent samples placed on a chip are excited through a prism interface, where the pump light is filtered out by total internal reflection after exciting the entire sample volume. The emitted fluorescent light from the specimen is collected through an on-chip fiber-optic faceplate and is delivered to a wide field-of-view opto-electronic sensor array for lensless recording of fluorescent spots corresponding to the samples. A compressive sampling based optimization algorithm is then used to rapidly reconstruct the sparse distribution of fluorescent sources to achieve ~10 µm spatial resolution over the entire active region of the sensor-array, i.e., over an imaging field-of-view of >8 cm2. Such a wide-field lensless fluorescent imaging platform could especially be significant for high-throughput imaging cytometry, rare cell analysis, as well as for micro-array research. ©2010 Optical Society of America

(As supplied by publisher.)

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