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On-chip fluorescence microscopy with a random microlens diffuser

Grace Kuo, Fanglin Linda Liu, Irene Grossrubatscher, Ren Ng, Laura Waller

2020Optics Express78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present an on-chip, widefield fluorescence microscope, which consists of a diffuser placed a few millimeters away from a traditional image sensor. The diffuser replaces the optics of a microscope, resulting in a compact and easy-to-assemble system with a practical working distance of over 1.5 mm. Furthermore, the diffuser encodes volumetric information, enabling refocusability in post-processing and three-dimensional (3D) imaging of sparse samples from a single acquisition. Reconstruction of images from the raw data requires a precise model of the system, so we introduce a practical calibration scheme and a physics-based forward model to efficiently account for the spatially-varying point spread function (PSF). To improve performance in low-light, we propose a random microlens diffuser, which consists of many small lenslets randomly placed on the mask surface and yields PSFs that are robust to noise. We build an experimental prototype and demonstrate our system on both planar and 3D samples.

Topics & Concepts

MicrolensDiffuser (optics)OpticsPoint spread functionMicroscopeCalibrationMicroscopyImage sensorNoise (video)ChipPlanarImage processingComputer scienceMaterials scienceLens (geology)PhysicsComputer visionComputer graphics (images)Image (mathematics)TelecommunicationsQuantum mechanicsLight sourceAdvanced Fluorescence Microscopy TechniquesDigital Holography and MicroscopyImage Processing Techniques and Applications
On-chip fluorescence microscopy with a random microlens diffuser | Litcius