Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes

Surface plasmons (SP) are guided electromagnetic wave propagating along the surface of metal. The properties of SP are affected by the material attached to the metallic surface so they can be used as a very sensitive sensor capable of detecting the deposition of subnanometric layers of dielectric. S...

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Main Author: Pechprasarn, Suejit
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13100/
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author Pechprasarn, Suejit
author_facet Pechprasarn, Suejit
author_sort Pechprasarn, Suejit
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Surface plasmons (SP) are guided electromagnetic wave propagating along the surface of metal. The properties of SP are affected by the material attached to the metallic surface so they can be used as a very sensitive sensor capable of detecting the deposition of subnanometric layers of dielectric. SP has been widely investigated for biosensor applications and the theory is well established. Although SP sensors have been well studied, integrating the SP to a microscope is a relatively young field. Since the SPs are surface waves; microscopy techniques to optimise the SP microscope performance will require totally different techniques to non-surface wave microscopy. This thesis develops a theoretical framework to understand different types of SP microscope setups through the rigorous diffraction theory. The framework analyses the diffraction process through rigorous wave coupled analysis (RCWA) and a software package processes the diffracted orders to recover the microscope response for a range of different systems. In this thesis I will investigate the non-interferometric SP microscope, interferometric SP microscope and confocal SP microscope. I will show that the non-interferometric system exhibits a trade-off between lateral resolution and sensitivity, where an image obtained with a good contrast will have low lateral resolution. In order to get around the trade-off, the interferometric system can be employed; however, the main challenge for the interferometric setup is its optical alignment. I will show that a confocal SP microscope, which has been developed as a part of this thesis, can simplify the complexity of the interferometric system and give similar measurement performance. For the interferometric and confocal systems, the SP measurements are normally carried out through the interference signal, which is interference between a reference beam and the SP. I will suggest a method to extract SP propagation parameters from the interference signal by employing a spatial light modulator and also show that the SP propagation parameters do not only give us some insight to the SP effect for the interferometric system, but also gives us a new imaging mode to improve the resolution.
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language English
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spelling nottingham-131002025-02-28T11:23:09Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13100/ Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes Pechprasarn, Suejit Surface plasmons (SP) are guided electromagnetic wave propagating along the surface of metal. The properties of SP are affected by the material attached to the metallic surface so they can be used as a very sensitive sensor capable of detecting the deposition of subnanometric layers of dielectric. SP has been widely investigated for biosensor applications and the theory is well established. Although SP sensors have been well studied, integrating the SP to a microscope is a relatively young field. Since the SPs are surface waves; microscopy techniques to optimise the SP microscope performance will require totally different techniques to non-surface wave microscopy. This thesis develops a theoretical framework to understand different types of SP microscope setups through the rigorous diffraction theory. The framework analyses the diffraction process through rigorous wave coupled analysis (RCWA) and a software package processes the diffracted orders to recover the microscope response for a range of different systems. In this thesis I will investigate the non-interferometric SP microscope, interferometric SP microscope and confocal SP microscope. I will show that the non-interferometric system exhibits a trade-off between lateral resolution and sensitivity, where an image obtained with a good contrast will have low lateral resolution. In order to get around the trade-off, the interferometric system can be employed; however, the main challenge for the interferometric setup is its optical alignment. I will show that a confocal SP microscope, which has been developed as a part of this thesis, can simplify the complexity of the interferometric system and give similar measurement performance. For the interferometric and confocal systems, the SP measurements are normally carried out through the interference signal, which is interference between a reference beam and the SP. I will suggest a method to extract SP propagation parameters from the interference signal by employing a spatial light modulator and also show that the SP propagation parameters do not only give us some insight to the SP effect for the interferometric system, but also gives us a new imaging mode to improve the resolution. 2012-12-17 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13100/1/Suejit_Pechprasarn_PhD_thesis_29_10_2012.pdf Pechprasarn, Suejit (2012) Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Surface plasmon resonance microscopy resolution (Optics)
spellingShingle Surface plasmon resonance
microscopy
resolution (Optics)
Pechprasarn, Suejit
Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title_full Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title_fullStr Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title_short Analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
title_sort analysis of sensitivity and resolution in plasmonic microscopes
topic Surface plasmon resonance
microscopy
resolution (Optics)
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/13100/