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1.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 4360, 2022 07 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35896536

ABSTRACT

Ultra-violet (UV) light has still a limited scope in optical microscopy despite its potential advantages over visible light in terms of optical resolution and of interaction with a wide variety of biological molecules. The main challenge is to control in a robust, compact and cost-effective way UV light beams at the level of a single optical spatial mode and concomitantly to minimize the light propagation loss. To tackle this challenge, we present here photonic integrated circuits made of aluminum oxide thin layers that are compatible with both UV light and high-volume manufacturing. These photonic circuits designed at a wavelength of 360 nm enable super-resolved structured illumination microscopy with conventional wide-field microscopes and without modifying the usual protocol for handling the object to be imaged. As a biological application, we show that our UV photonic chips enable to image the autofluorescence of yeast cells and reveal features unresolved with standard wide-field microscopy.


Subject(s)
Lighting , Microscopy , Light , Microscopy/methods , Photons
2.
Opt Express ; 28(22): 33564-33572, 2020 Oct 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33115016

ABSTRACT

In the quest for a more compact and cheaper Raman sensor, photonic integration and plasmonic enhancement are central. Nanoplasmonic slot waveguides exhibit the benefits of SERS substrates while being compatible with photonic integration and mass-scale (CMOS) fabrication. A difficulty in pursuing further integration of the Raman sensor with lasers, spectral filters, spectrometers and interconnecting waveguides lies in the presence of a photon background generated by the excitation laser field in any dielectric waveguide constituting those elements. Here, we show this problem can be mitigated by using a multi-mode interferometer and a nanoplasmonic slot waveguide operated in back-reflection to greatly suppress the excitation field behind the sensor while inducing very little photon background.

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