Nonlinear photothermal Mid-Infrared Microspectroscopy with Superresolution
ORAL
Abstract
We describe a nonlinear method for breaking the diffraction limit in mid-infrared microscopy using nonlinear photothermal microspectroscopy. A Quantum Cascade Laser (QCL) tuned to an infrared active vibrational molecular normal mode is used as the pump laser. A low-phase noise Erbium-doped fiber (EDFL) laser is used as the probe. When the incident intensity of the mid-infrared pump laser is increased past a critical threshold, a nanobubble is nucleated, strongly modulating the scatter of the probe beam, in agreement with prior work. Remarkably, we have also found that the photothermal spectral signature of the mid-infrared absorption bifurcates and is strongly narrowed, consistent with an effective ``mean-field'' theory of the observed pitchfork bifurcation. This ultrasharp narrowing can be exploited to obtain mid-infrared images with a resolution that breaks the diffraction limit, without the need of mechanical scanning near-field probes. The method provides a powerful new tool for hyperspectral label-free mid-infrared imaging and characterization of biological tissues and materials science and engineering.
–
Authors
-
Shyamsunder Erramilli
Physics department \& the Photonics Center, Boston University
-
Alket Mertiri
Department of Biology, Boston University
-
Hui Liu
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Boston University
-
Atcha Totachawattana
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Boston University
-
Mi Hong
Physics department, Boston University
-
Michelle Sander
Electrical and Computer Engineering, Boston University