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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
31

CARS untersuchung von energietransferprozessen am Na-H2- system

Cunha, Silvio Luiz Souza January 1986 (has links)
Der Energietransfer von elektronischer Energie in Schwingungs- und Rotationsenergie ist einer der elementarsten nichtadiabatischen Prozesse. Obwohl diese Prozesse seit langen untersucht werden, sind sie nicht im Detail verstanden. Das StoBsystem Na+H2 hat dabei Modellcharakter. Natrium ist ein Wasserstoffãhnliches Atom mit einem s-Elektron auf der auBersten Schale, und H2 ist das einfachste Molekül überhaupt. Ab initio Potentialflachen- Berechnungen sind deshalb mit guter Genauigkeit moglich und auch durchgef iihrt worden. Die elektronische Energie des Na-Atoms von 2,1eV wird dabei durch einen nichtadiabatischen Stoi3 in Schwingungs- und Rotationsenergie des H2-Moleküls iibertragen; ein Vorgang der auch als "Quenchen" bekannt ist. Von essentieller Bedeutung ist es, welche Schwingungs- und Rotationszustãnde besetzt werden. Es gab bisher keine experimentelle Untersuchung, bei der die interne Energieverteilung des H2-Moleküls direkt untersucht wurde. Der Grund dafür ist der, daB konventionelle Techniken zum Nachweis von H2 nicht geeignet sind. Aufgabe der vorliegenden Arbeit war es, erstmals CARS (Kohirente Antistokes-Raman-Streuung) für die oben genannten StoBprozesse einzusetzen und nachzuprüfen, wie gut sich diese Technik anwenden IãBt. CARS ist seit vielen Jahren bekannt, hat jedoch erst in der letzten Zeit durch die Entwicklung von intensiven gepulsten Laser mit geringer Bandbreite sehr an Bedeutung gewonnen. Insbesonders CARS an Wasserstoff wurde intensiv untersucht, nicht jedoch mit Beimischung von Natrium. Im vorliegenden Gasgemisch aus Natrium und H2 erzeugt Natrium durch seine energetisch sehr niedrigen elektronischen Zustãnde einen nichtresonanten Untergrund, der die Nachweis-Wahrscheinlichkeit so stark reduzieren kann, daí3 eine sinnvolle Anwendung nicht mehr mõglich sein konnte. Es ist gelungen zu zeigen, dali trotz eines enormen nichtresonanten Untergrundes eine sehr hohe Nachweiswahrscheinlichkeit mit CARS erzielt werden kann. Sie betrãgt für H2 mit Na im Grundzustand 1012 Teilchen pro cm3 und Quantenzustand und in Gegenwart von angeregtem Natrium 1013 Teilchen pro cm 3 und Quantenzustand. Mit der neu gebauten CARS-Apparatur wurde eine Reihe von neuen Experimenten durchgef a) Es konnte erstmals direkt die Schwingungsverteilung von H2 nach dem Quenchprozel3 bestimmt werden. Es konnte die absolute Besetzung der Schwingungszustãnde v=3,2 und 1 bestimmt werden. Eine Besetzung bei v=4 wurde nicht beobachtet. b) Mit einer zeitabhãngigen CARS-Messung konnte erstmalig die Schwingungsrelaxation der genannten Schwingungszustãnde gemessen und mit einem Ratengleichungsmodell die Ratenkonstanten mit sehr guter Obereinstimmung bestimmt werden. c) Aus der Besetzung der Schwingungszustãnde laBt sich ein absoluter Querschnitt für den Quenchprozei bestimmen. In Vergleich zu den klassischen Fluoreszenzmethoden wird dabei nicht die Abnahme der Fluoreszenz durch den StoBgasdruck bestimmt, sondern die direkte Besetzung des Quenchers nachgewiesen. Diese Methode wird erstmalig vorgestellt. Sie ist viel weniger empfindlich auf Verunreinigungen. Der erhaltene Wert für den Quenchquerschnitt betragt aq=12A2. d) Es laBt sich auch eine Aussage Uber die Rotationsbesetzung nach dem QuenchprozeB machen. Sie konnte bestimmt werden und ist nahezu thermisch, d.h. sie hat dieselbe Temperatur wie die Zelle. Dieses Ergebnis ist in übereinstimmung mit theoretische Modellen und bestãtigt die Vorstellung, dali das p-Orbital des angeregten Natriums sich bei Annãherung an das H2-Molekül ausrichtet und der QuenchprozeB vorwiegend in C2v -Symmetrie ablauft. Es ist gelungen zu zeigen, daB CARS sich erfolgreich für Untersuchungen an nichtadiabatischen StoBprozessen einsetzen laBt. Dadurch wurde erstmals erzielt. / Nonadiabatic collisions between atoms and molecules have drawn a large amount of attention in theoretical and experimental studies. In particular, the transfer of electronic energy of an atom to the vibrational, rotational and translational energy of a diatomic molecule (also called electronic quenching) can be considered an important fundamental process of this type and is thus extensively investigated. We study the Na + 112 as a model collision system for experimental and theoretical reasons since ab initio potential surfaces are currently available, enabling comparison of experimental results with theoretical calculations. We apply a new experimental technique in the field of nonadiabatic processes to obtain a more detailed understanding of these energy transfer processes. We use Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Spectroscopy (CARS) to measure directly the internai energy distribution of H2 molecules produced by quenching of Na in the first excited state (3 2P112). Although CARS has been used to detect 112 among other species, it has never been applied to gaseous mixtures with H2 and atomic or molecular sodium. Sodium with its low lying electronic states produces a strong nonresonant background that strongly reduces the sensitivity of CARS. With a new constructed apparatus a sensitivity for H2 of 1012 particles per cm3 and quantum state in the presence of ground state sodium was achieved and 1013 particles per cm3 and quantum state with excited sodium. The following results were obtained: 1. The absolute population of vibrational leveis up to v=3 has been obtained and was found to be extremly nonthermal. The state distribution is, however, in good agreement with the available theoretical predictions. 2. With a time resolved CARS experiment we monitored the vibrational relaxation of these states. For this experiment we use excited sodium as an effective way to produce vibrationally hot hydrogen. With a simple model, we determined for the first time the vibrational relaxation time for v=3, 2 and 1 to be 2.4ps, 3.4ps and 31ps respectively. 3. From the measured absolute populations of the vibrational states of hydrogen the absolute cross section for the quenching process can be determined. This novel technique is not sensitive to impurities that also quench the electronic states of sodium very effectively. Our method involves only processes that produce vibrationally excited hydrogen. Due to the large vibrational spacing only H2 molecules that have undergone a quenching process are vibrationally excited. The cross section we determinei! is 12 cA'2, and is smaller than literature values due to the effect described. 4. We also measured the rotational distribution for different vibrational leveis. At the sensitivity limit of our apparatus the rotational distribution was estimated to be nearly thermal. This fact is also in good agreement with theoretical models for the collision process. It has heen shown that CARS is a very usefull spectroscopic technique with sufficient sensitivity to be applied to the study of nonadiabatic collision processes. CARS was used for the first time to investigate these processes and gave the new interesting results shown above.
32

Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering Miniaturized Microscope

Smith, Brett January 2013 (has links)
Microscopy techniques have been developed and refined over multiple decades, but innovation around single photon modalities has slowed. The advancement of the utility of information acquired, and minimum resolution available is seemingly reaching an asymptote. The fusion of light microscopy and well-studied nonlinear processes has broken through this barrier and enabled the collection of vast amounts of additional information beyond the topographical information relayed by traditional microscopes. Through nonlinear imaging modalities, chemical information can also be extracted from tissue. Nonlinear microscopy also can beat the resolution limit caused by diffraction, and offers up three-dimensional capabilities. The power of nonlinear imaging has been demonstrated by countless research groups, solidifying it as a major player in biomedical imaging. The value of a nonlinear imaging system could be enhanced if a reduction in size would permit the insertion into bodily cavities, as has been demonstrated by linear imaging endoscopes. The miniaturization of single photon imaging devices has led to significant advancements in diagnostics and treatment in the medical field. Much more information can be extracted from a patient if the tissue can be imaged in vivo, a capability that traditional, bulky, table top microscopes cannot offer. The development of new technologies in optics has enabled the miniaturization of many critical components of standard microscopes. It is possible to combine nonlinear techniques with these miniaturized elements into a portable, hand held microscope that can be applied to various facets of the biomedical field. The research demonstrated in this thesis is based on the selection, testing and assembly of several miniaturized optical components for use as a nonlinear imaging device. This thesis is the first demonstration of a fibre delivered, microelectromechanical systems mirror with miniaturized optics housed in a portable, hand held package. Specifically, it is designed for coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering, second harmonic generation, and two-photon excitation fluorescence imaging. Depending on the modality being exploited, different chemical information can be extracted from the sample being imaged. This miniaturized microscope can be applied to diagnostics and treatments of spinal cord diseases and injuries, atherosclerosis research, cancer tumour identification and a plethora of other biomedical applications. The device that will be revealed in the upcoming text is validated by demonstrating all designed-for nonlinear modalities, and later will be used to perform serialized imaging of myelin of a single specimen over time.
33

Characterization of Nonequilibrium Reacting Molecular Plasmas and Flames using Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Spectroscopy

Hung, Yi-chen, Hung 18 December 2018 (has links)
No description available.
34

Evaluation of Amyloid Fibrils as Templates for Photon Upconversion by Sensitized Triplet-Triplet Annihilation / Utvärdering av Amyloidfibriller som Stödmaterial för Photon Upconversion via Sensitized   Triplet-Triplet Annihilation

Berkowicz, Sharon, Olsson, Helena, Broberg, Henrik January 2017 (has links)
In the face of global warming and shrinking resources of fossil fuels the interest in solar energy has increased in recent years. However, the low energy and cost efficiency of current solar cells has up to this date hindered solar energy from playing a major role on the energy market. Photon upconversion is the process in which light of low energy is converted to high energy photons. Lately, this phenomenon has attracted renewed interest and ongoing research in this field mainly focuses on solar energy applications, solar cells in particular. The aim of this study was to investigate and evaluate amyloid fibrils as nanotemplates for an upconversion system based on the dyes platinum octaetylporphyrin (PtOEP) and 9,10- diphenylanthracene (DPA). This well-known pair of organic dyes upconverts light in the visible spectrum through a mechanism known as sensitized triplet-triplet annihilation. Amyloid fibrils are β-sheet rich protein fibril structures, formed by self-assembly of peptides. Amyloid fibrils were prepared from whey protein isolate using heat and acidic solutions. Dyes were incorporated according to a wellestablished technique, in which dyes are grinded together with the protein in solid state prior to fibrillization. Photophysical properties of pure fibrils and dye-incorporated fibrils were studied using UV-VIS spectroscopy and fluorescence spectroscopy. Atomic force microscopy was further employed to confirm the presence of amyloid fibrils as well as to study fibril structure. Results indicate that amyloid fibrils may not be the optimal host material for the upconversion system PtOEP/DPA. It was found that the absorption and emission spectra of this system overlap to a great deal with that of the fibrils. Though no upconverted emission clearly generated by the dye system was recorded, anti-Stokes emission was indeed observed. Interestingly, this emission appears to be strongly enhanced by the presence of dyes. It is suggested that this emission may be attributed to the protein residues rather than the amyloid structure. Future studies are encouraged to further investigate these remarkable findings. / Intresset för solceller har ökat under de senaste åren, till stor del tillföljd av den globala uppvärmningen och de sinande oljeresurserna. Dagens solceller har dock problem med låg energi- och kostnadseffektivitet, vilket gör att solenergin än så länge har svårt att hävda sig på energimarknaden. Photon upconversion är ett fotofysikaliskt fenomen där fotoner med låg energi omvandlas till fotoner med hög energi. Den senaste tiden har denna process fått förnyat intresse och forskningen inom området har ökat, inte minst med sikte på att integrera processen i solceller och därmed öka dess effektivitet. Målet med denna studie var att undersöka huruvida amyloidfibriller kan användas som stomme för ett photon upconversion-system baserat på platinum-oktaetylporfyrin (PtOEP) och 9,10-difenylantracen (DPA). Dessa två organiska färgämnen är ett välkänt par som konverterar synligt ljus med låg frekvens till mer hög frekvent ljus i det synliga spektrumet, via en mekanism som kallas sensitized triplet-triplet annihilation. Amyloidfibriller är proteinbaserade fiberstrukturer med hög andel β-flak, vilka bildas genom självassociation av peptider. I denna studie skapades amyloidfibriller av vassleprotein genom upphettning i sur lösning. Färgämnena inkorporerades enligt en välbeprövad metod där proteinet mortlas tillsammans med färgämnena i fast tillstånd, innan fibrilleringsprocessen påbörjas. De fotofysikaliska egenskaperna hos fibriller med och utan färgämnen analyserade med UV-VIS samt fluorescensspektroskopi. Atomkraftsmikroskopi användes för att bekräfta att fibriller fanns i proven, samt för att studera dess struktur. De erhållna resultaten antyder att amyloidfibriller inte är ett optimalt material för systemet PtOEP/DPA, delvis på grund av att absorptions- och emissionsspektrumet för systemet överlappar med fibrillernas egna spektrum. Anti-Stokes emission detekterades, men denna är med stor sannolikhet inte orsakad av färgämnena. Dock noterades, intressant nog, att denna emission ökar betydligt i närvaro av färgämnena. En möjlighet är att denna emission är kopplad till monomerer i proteinet snarare än till fibrillstrukturen, eftersom emission observerades hos både nativt och fibrillerat protein. Framtida studier uppmuntras att vidare undersöka dessa effekter.
35

EXTENSION OF HYBRID FEMTOSECOND/PICOSECOND COHERENT ANTI-STOKES RAMAN SCATTERING TO HIGH-SPEED FLOWS

Erik Luders Braun (14221646) 06 December 2022 (has links)
<p> </p> <p>High-speed flows are important for defense, national security, and transportation applications and generate harsh environments where simplifying assumptions such as the ideal gas law are not valid due to nonequilibrium and chemistry effects. These flows are difficult and expensive to replicate experimentally, so the development and improvement of high-speed vehicles often relies on high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics (CFD) models. The successful modeling of complicated phenomena, such as heat transfer in a turbulent boundary layer, relies on validation by experimental data taken with high spatiotemporal resolution, precision, and accuracy. Precise experimental measurement of temperature, an important thermodynamic property for CFD models, is difficult with physical probes which are typically slow and perturb the flow. Instead, hybrid femtosecond/picosecond (fs/ps) coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) allows for non-intrusive, spatially-resolved, collision-free thermometry at kHz repetition rates with high precision and accuracy. </p> <p>The goal of this thesis is to advance hybrid fs/ps CARS for extension to high-speed flows, with particular improvements to the spatial extent, probe characteristics, and precision of the technique. A novel method for multipoint measurements in a simple and effective optical arrangement is demonstrated, enabling single-shot and averaged measurements of temperature and O<sub>2</sub>/N<sub>2</sub> concentration along a linear array of probe volumes. The generation of a variable-pulsewidth probe beam by a ps slicer, electro-optic modulator, fiber amplifier, and custom narrowband amplifier system is used for improved signal-to-noise ratios at low pressure. Simultaneous CARS thermometry and femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging (FLEET) velocimetry are performed in the freestream of Mach 3 and Mach 4 nitrogen flows. These measurements reveal the need to quantify and establish the ultimate precision of the hybrid fs/ps CARS technique. Sources of uncertainty in hybrid fs/ps CARS thermometry are determined through a theoretical uncertainty analysis and the predicted precision of the technique is confirmed experimentally in room temperature nitrogen. Benchtop measurements in a supersonic nozzle are used to indicate spatial and temporal simultaneity between FLEET and CARS measurements and hybrid fs/ps CARS thermometry is performed in a high-speed, low temperature flow.</p>
36

Clinical cancer diagnosis using optical fiber-delivered coherent anti-stokes ramon scattering microscopy

January 2012 (has links)
This thesis describes the development of a combined label-free imaging and analytical strategy for intraoperative characterization of cancer lesions using the coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering imaging (CARS) technique. A cell morphology-based analytical platform is developed to characterize CARS images and, hence, provide diagnostic information using disease-related pathology features. This strategy is validated for three different applications, including margin detection for radical prostatectomy, differential diagnosis of lung cancer, as well as detection and differentiation of breast cancer subtypes for in situ analysis of margin status during lumpectomy. As the major contribution of this thesis, the developed analytical strategy shows high accuracy and specificity for all three diseases and thus has introduced the CARS imaging technique into the field of human cancer diagnosis, which holds substantial potential for clinical translations. In addition, I have contributed a project aimed at miniaturizing the CARS imaging device into a microendoscope setup through a fiber-delivery strategy. A four-wave-mixing (FWM) background signal, which is caused by simultaneous delivery of the two CARS-generating excitation laser beams, is initially identified. A polarization-based strategy is then introduced and tested for suppression of this FWM noise. The approach shows effective suppression of the FWM signal, both on microscopic and prototype endoscopic setups, indicating the potential of developing a novel microendoscope with a compatible size for clinical use. These positive results show promise for the development of an all-fiber-based, label-free imaging and analytical platform for minimally invasive detection and diagnosis of cancers during surgery or surgical-biopsy, thus improving surgical outcomes and reducing patients' suffering.
37

Enhancement of Raman signals : coherent Raman scattering and surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy

Chou, He-Chun 06 July 2012 (has links)
Raman spectroscopy is a promising technique because it contains abundant vibrational chemical information. However, Raman spectroscopy is restricted by its small scattering cross section, and many techniques have been developed to amplify Raman scattering intensity. In this dissertation, I study two of these techniques, coherent Raman scattering and surface enhanced Raman scattering and discuss their properties. In the first part of my dissertation, I investigate two coherent Raman processes, coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) and stimulated Raman scattering (SRS). In CARS project, I mainly focus on the molecular resonance effect on detection sensitivity, and I find the detection sensitivity can be pushed into 10 [micromolar] with the assistance of molecular resonance. Also, I am able to retrieve background-free Raman spectra from nonresonant signals. For SRS, we develop a new SRS system by applying spectral focusing mechanism technique. We examine the feasibility and sensitivity of our SRS system. The SRS spectra of standards obtained from our system is consistent with literature, and the sensitivity of our system can achieve 10 times above shot-noise limit. In second part of this dissertation, I study surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) and related plasmonic effects. I synthesize different shapes of nanoparticles, including nanorod, nanodimer structure with gap and pyramids by template method, and study how electric field enhancement effects correlate to SERS by two photon luminescence (TPL). Also, I build an optical system to study optical image, spectra and particle morphology together. I find that SERS intensity distribution is inhomogeneous and closely related to nanoparticle shape and polarization direction. However, TPL and SERS are not completely correlated, and I believe different relaxation pathways of TPL and SERS and coupling of LSPR and local fields at different frequencies cause unclear correlation between them. / text
38

Theory of Image Formation in Non-linear Optical Microscopy

van der Kolk, Jarno Nicolaas January 2017 (has links)
Nonlinear optical microscopy is a collection of very powerful imaging techniques. Linear optical microscopes probe the refractive index and absorption, which both stem from the first-order linear electric susceptibility. Especially in biological tissue, the variation in the refractive index is often small and the tissue is, in many cases, transparant. Nonlinear optical microscopes on the other hand probe the nonlinear higher-order susceptibilities, which can be chemically sensitive, leading to the capability to achieve label-free imaging. Nonlinear optical microscopes have been in development for more than thirty years and they are based on numerous nonlinear optical processes. The ones I will concentrate on in this thesis are second harmonic generation (SHG), coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS), and stimulated Raman Scattering (SRS). The first technique is commonly used to image collagen as those molecules have a particularly large second-order nonlinear susceptibility due to their chiral structure. CARS and SRS on the other hand are often used because they resonantly target vibrational resonances in molecules, giving rise to the aforementioned label-free imaging. Deep understanding of the nonlinear imaging process is crucial to the interpretation of the images these techniques produce. Computational tools are exceptionally suited for this task as they allow studying the electromagnetic field anywhere in the sample as well as the far-field, and one can change any of the material properties to study their effect. One such tool is finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) that our group developed for nonlinear optical microscopy simulations. It is a direct discretization of Maxwell's equation. While computationally costly, it does allow any arbitrary shaped sample to be simulated. The sample can have frequency dependent refractive indexes, and also nonlinear media with third-order nonlinearities such as Kerr media and Raman-active media, but also second-order nonlinearities for SHG. The code is designed in such a way that it can run on thousands of CPUs on a wide variety of compute cluster which allows our group to obtain nanoscale resolution. Another computational tool I use is the free-space Green's function solution to the Helmholtz equation, which can be used to calculate the Hertz vector in the frequency domain, both in the near- and far-field, based on the induced nonlinear polarization. The electric field is then calculated from this Hertz vector. This technique is much faster then FDTD and also allows for arbitrary shapes of the nonlinear electric susceptibility in the sample. However, it assumes a homogeneous refractive index throughout the entire spatial domain and requires complete knowledge of the input beam or beams that induce the nonlinear polarization. In this thesis, I use these tools to study the image formation process of various nonlinear optical processes mentioned earlier. For example, I study the effect of an inhomogeneous refractive index on the images produced by these microscopes. In literature the index of refraction is almost always assumed to be homogeneous, because, as mentioned before, the inhomogeneity of the refractive index is often small. However, I show that these small differences in the index of refraction can have a significant effect on the measured far-field intensity signal. For example, in SRS and CARS images, the measured signal can increase by an order of magnitude depending on the index mismatch and structure of the sample. Additionally, significant shifts in perceived position occur. Even nonresonant nonlinear signals can be evoked purely through a mismatch in linear refractive index. Computational modelling can also help reveal additional detail. As SHG is a coherent process, subwavelength information can be inferred through the phase information. Our experimental collaborators built an interferometric SHG (I-SHG) microscope for exactly that purpose. We used this to image collagen fibrils, which are all aligned in a parallel fashion. However, because collagen fibrils have a chiral molecular structure, they can point either ``up'' or ``down''. Using my Green's function simulations of the SHG imaging process of collagen fibrils, I was able to predict the standard deviation in the measured phase and link it to the orientation of collagen fibrils in the focal spot of the probing laser beam, even though the diameters are far below the minimum resolvable capabilities of the microscope. We found that the ``upwards'' fibrils make up 46--53% of the sample. Even with a normal SHG microscope that does not measures phase, additional subresolution information is obtainable. With our collaborators we measured the ratio of the forward SHG intensity signal to that in the backward direction and with my simulations, we are able to link this to the fibril diameters in collagen tissue. Thus we inferred that the fibril diameter increases as a function of tissue depth. Furthermore, a computational technique called ptychography is able to retrieve phase information without an interferometric reference beam. Additionally, it increases resolution to the theoretical limit, independent of the laser focal spot size, and corrects for distortions in the input beam as well. I have developed this technique for use with nonlinear optical microscopy and was able to show it is a viable alternative to I-SHG by imaging simulated rat tail tendon at the diffraction limit while retrieving the orientation of the fibrils through the phase of the SHG signal. I also implemented the algorithm for CARS, where the phase information can be used to greatly increase the signal-to-noise ratio by reducing the nonresonant background radiation that results from competing nonlinear optical processes. I showed an example of this by imaging a simulated fibroblast cell where the CARS process was tuned to the lipid droplets inside of the cell. I am currently in talk with experimentalists to apply this theoretical technique to experiments as that would further demonstrate the impact of my work. Finally, keeping in theme with the collagen fibrils, I show that the ratio of the forward SHG signal to the backward signal, the F/B ratio, is affected by a mismatch in the refractive index for fibrils larger than 100nm. This measure is an indicator of fibril diameter and thus important for making qualitative predictions. Single fibrils are generally too small to be significantly affected by near-field effects, but the bigger fibrils can be. Fibrils in rat tail tendon have a distribution of fibrils diameters and the large fibrils occur infrequent. However, I found that the large fibrils are largely responsible for the forward as well as backward signal, thus refractive index mismatches still affect the F/B ratio significantly despite their infrequency. The F/B ratio for a collection of fibrils placed in a n=1.47 medium was found to be 31.8±0.7% higher than for those in a n=1.33 medium. Our experimental colleagues have done preliminary measurements on mouse tail tendon where they found an increase of 40±20%, in line with the value of 28.1±0.6% that I found for simulations with mouse tail tendon. In conclusion, the theoretical tools I have used in my thesis have provided me with the ability to study nonlinear optical image formation processes with a level of detail that would be near-impossible to do experimentally. I have used this ability to show how refractive index mismatches, such as those found in biological tissue, can significantly distort the far-field intensity signals. I have shown this for SRS and CARS where the far-field intensity signal appeared an order-of-magnitude larger compared to the same sample without a refractive index mismatch with the background medium. Additionally, shifts in the perceived position of the object under investigation were observed and I showed the presence of a nonresonant background signal in AM-SRS. Likewise I showed that in the SHG imaging of collagen fibrils significant changes in the F/B ratio can occur. All of these effects have important implications as these types of images as biomedical researches rely on the correct interpretation of nonlinear optical microscopy images for both research and diagnostics. Apart from showing the effect of a refractive index mismatch, I have also shown that computation modelling can be used to infer subwavelength features in SHG imaging experiments of collagen fibril such as fibril orientation and fibril diameter. These methods have the potential to aid medical researchers as changes in the structure of collagen are often an early indicator of diseases such as osteoarthritis. Finally, I showed that the ptychography algorithm I developed for nonlinear optical microscopy is able to retrieve phase information of the nonlinear electric susceptibility in SHG and CARS imaging while also enhancing the resolution and correcting for distortions in the input beams. I can also use much larger laser spot sizes than in conventional experiments without compromising the obtained resolution, thus fewer measurements are required. The technique is not limited to SHG and CARS either; it will work for other nonlinear optical processes as well. Experimental verification of nonlinear ptychography will be done soon. This technique has to potential to significantly improve current imaging techniques since access to the phase information allows one to observe additional information about the sample as we showed with the I-SHG microscope.
39

Microscopie de mélange à quatre ondes résolue en polarisation pour sonder l’ordre moléculaire dans les milieux biologiques / Polarization resolved four-wave mixing microscopy : a tool to probe molecular order in biological media

Bioud, Fatma Zohra 28 November 2013 (has links)
Nous avons développé une méthodologie basée sur phénomène de mélange à quatre ondre polarimétrique « Four wave Mixing FWM » et son équivalen résonant la diffusion Raman cohérente anti-Stokes (CARS, Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Scattering) polarimétrique et réalisé des mesures sur des systèmes cristallins, simili biologiques : les membranes cellulaires connues sous le nom de « Multilamellar Vesicles MLV » et des échantillons de biologiques : la myeline, et ce, en variant les polarisations des lasers excitateurs, Pompe et Stokes. Le signal anti-Stokes émis est ensuite analysé afin d’en extraire les ordres 2 et 4 de la fonction de distribution angulaire des molécules actives constituant l’échantillon. Pour cela, plusieurs approches sont explorées telles que des algorithmes d’optimisation ou par décomposition en série de fourrier du signal polarimétrique. Ces multiples approches en traitement du signal permettent d’obtenir de manière rapide les coefficients des fonctions de distribution angulaire recherchées, et ainsi d’avoir des informations sur la symétrie des échantillons imagés, allant jusqu’à l’observation d’une symétrie d’ordre 4. La capacité de la microscopie non linéaire résolue en polarisation à sonder des ordres moléculaires est clairement démontrée et ainsi son intérêt dans l’étude de la relation entre la structure et la fonction de systèmes biologiques. / The capacity to quantify molecular orientational order in tissues is of a great interest since pathologies (skin lesion, neurodegenerative diseases, etc) can induce strong modifications in proteins’ organization. While numerous studies have been undertaken using polarization resolved second order nonlinear optical microscopy which is only specific to non-centrosymmetric organizations, higher order effects have been less explored. Four-wave mixing (FWM) microscopy and its resonant counterpart coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (CARS) can be of a great utility as label free diagnosis tools benefiting from less constraining symmetry rules. In this work, we implement incident polarizations tuning in FWM and CARS microscopy to probe molecular order, using a generic method to read-out symmetry information.Fourier analysis of the polarization-resolved FWM/CARS signal processed with an analytical model provides a fast and direct determination of the symmetry orders of the distribution function of the probed molecules. This method does not require a priori knowledge of the organization structure and provides quantitatively its second and fourth order symmetries. We applied this technique on different systems, from crystalline to less organized (multilamellar vesicles and proteins aggregates). We show that this new approach brings additional and more refined information on supra-molecular structures in complex media.
40

Optická charakterizace pokročilých nanomateriálů s vysokým laterálním rozlišením / Optical characterization of advanced nanomaterials with a high lateral resolution

Liška, Petr January 2021 (has links)
Advanced nanomaterials show a significant improvement in certain physical or functional properties compared to conventional materials. Such advanced materials are, for example, lead halide perovskites (LHP). It is a group of hybrid organic-inorganic materials with a direct bandgap exhibiting unique optical properties. The high quantum efficiency of photoluminescence makes nanocrystals or thin films of LHP suitable candidates for the production of light-emitting diodes, solar cells and LCD displays. Their inexpensive and simple fabrication together with their unique optical properties makes LHP one of the most developed materials of the last decade. This diploma thesis aims to study the optical properties of CsPbBr3 perovskite nanocrystals using high lateral resolution methods. CsPbBr3 perovskite nanocrystals show intense anti-Stokes photoluminescence. These nanocrystals can emit light with a lower wavelength than that of the light that causes their photoluminescence. The nanocrystals are prepared in two different ways: by evaporation or by crystallization of the precursor in a solution of dimethylformamide. The morphology, photoluminescence properties and chemical composition of individual nanocrystals are studied. Each nanocrystal is studied individually and its size, shape, photoluminescence properties and chemical compounds are determined, which leads to a deeper understanding of the anti-Stokes photoluminescence of perovskite nanocrystals.

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