scispace - formally typeset
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Two-photon excitation in laser scanning fluorescence microscopy

James H. Strickler, +1 more
- Vol. 1398, pp 107-118
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, two red photons from a strongly focused subpicosecond colliding pulse mode 4ocked dye laser stimulate visible fluorescence emission from fluorophores having their normal absorption in the ultraviolet.
Abstract
Simultaneous absorption of two red photons from a strongly focused subpicosecond colliding pulse mode4ocked dye laser stimulates visible fluorescence emission from fluorophores having their normal absorption in the ultraviolet1. The quadratic increase of the two-photon excitation rate with excitation intensity restricts fluorescence emission to the focal volume thus providing the same depth resolution as does confocal microscopy. Image degradation due to out of focus backround is thus avoided. Photobleaching and most cellular photodamage are similarly confined to the focus thereby minimizing sample degredation during acquisition of the multiple sections required for 3-d image reconstruction. Fluorescence images of living cells and other thick photolabile fluorescence labled assemblies illustrate the depth discrimination of both two-photon fluorescence excitation and photobleaching. The quadratic intensity dependence of two-photon excitation allows 3-d spatially resolved photochemistry in particular the photolytic release of caged compounds such as neurotransmitters nucleotides fluorescent dyes and second messengers such as 1P3 and Ca. The two-photon release of cased ATP has been measured and release of a caged fluorescent dye has been shown. Point photobleaching and a 3-d " write once read many" optical memory have been demonstrated. Two-photon excitation of photo-initiated polymerization with a sharply focused single beam allows microfabrication of complex structures of arbitrary form. By scanning the focused beam through a liquid polymer with a UV excited initiator it is possible to harden the polymer only at the focus thereby creating© (1991) COPYRIGHT SPIE--The International Society for Optical Engineering. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Two-photon polymerization initiators for three-dimensional optical data storage and microfabrication

TL;DR: In this article, a class of π;-conjugated compounds that exhibit large δ (as high as 1, 250 × 10−50 cm4 s per photon) and enhanced two-photon sensitivity relative to ultraviolet initiators were developed and used to demonstrate a scheme for three-dimensional data storage which permits fluorescent and refractive readout, and the fabrication of threedimensional micro-optical and micromechanical structures, including photonic bandgap-type structures.
Journal Article

Two-photon polymerization initiators for three-dimensional optical data storage and microfabrication

TL;DR: In this article, a class of π;-conjugated compounds that exhibit large δ (as high as 1, 250 × 10−50 cm4 s per photon) and enhanced two-photon sensitivity relative to ultraviolet initiators were developed and used to demonstrate a scheme for three-dimensional data storage which permits fluorescent and refractive read-out, and the fabrication of 3D micro-optical and micromechanical structures, including photonic-bandgap-type structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three-dimensional microfabrication with two-photon-absorbed photopolymerization.

TL;DR: The usefulness of the proposed method for three-dimensional microfabrication with photopolymerization stimulated by two-photon absorption with a pulsed infrared laser has been verified by fabrication of several kinds of microstructure by use of a resin consisting of photoinitiators, urethane acrylate monomers, and urethanacrylate oligomers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nonlinear optical properties, upconversion and lasing in metal–organic frameworks

TL;DR: This review shines light on CPs and MOFs as optical media for state-of-the-art photonic phenomena such as multi-photon absorption, triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA) and stimulated emission, and outlines design principles, employing both intramolecular and intermolecular strategies, that are necessary for maximizing the NLO response.
Journal ArticleDOI

3d microscopy of transparent objects using third-harmonic generation

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that third‐harmonic generation near interfaces in the refractive index or the third‐order nonlinear susceptibility (χ(3)) permits three‐dimensional imaging of transparent objects.
Related Papers (5)