Micromirror total internal reflection microscopy for high-performance single particle tracking at interfaces
Abstract
Single particle tracking has found broad applications in the life and physical sciences, enabling the observation and characterisation of nano- and microscopic motion. Fluorescence-based approaches are ideally suited for high-background environments, such as tracking lipids or proteins in or on cells, due to superior background rejection. Scattering-based detection is preferable when localisation precision and imaging speed are paramount due to the in principle infinite photon budget. Here, we show that micromirror-based total internal reflection dark field microscopy enables background suppression previously only reported for interferometric scattering microscopy, resulting in nm localisation precision at 6 s exposure time for 20 nm gold nanoparticles with a 25 x 25 m field of view. We demonstrate the capabilities of our implementation by characterizing sub-nm deterministic flows of 20 nm gold nanoparticles at liquid-liquid interfaces. Our results approach the optimal combination of background suppression, localisation precision and temporal resolution achievable with pure scattering-based imaging and tracking of nanoparticles at regular interfaces.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2103.09738,
title = {Micromirror total internal reflection microscopy for high-performance single particle tracking at interfaces},
author = {Xuanhui Meng and Adar Sonn-Segev and Anne Schumacher and Daniel Cole and Gavin Young and Stephen Thorpe and Robert W. Style and Eric R. Dufresne and Philipp Kukura},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2103.09738},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
27 pages, 4 figures