Abstract
Raman microscopy is a powerful analytical technique for materials and
life sciences that enables mapping the spatial distribution of the
chemical composition of a sample. State-of-the-art Raman microscopes,
based on point-scanning frequency-domain detection, have long (∼1s) pixel dwell times, making it
challenging to acquire images of a significant area (e.g., 100×100µm). Here we present a compact
wide-field Raman microscope based on a time-domain Fourier-transform
approach, which enables parallel acquisition of the Raman spectra on
all pixels of a 2D detector. A common-path birefringent interferometer
with exceptional delay stability and reproducibility can rapidly
acquire Raman maps (∼30min for a 250000pixel image) with high spatial (<1µm) and spectral (∼23cm−1) resolutions. Time-domain detection
allows us to disentangle fluorescence and Raman signals, which can
both be measured separately. We validate the system by Raman imaging
plastic microbeads and demonstrate its multimodal operation by
capturing fluorescence and Raman maps of a multilayer-WSe2 sample, providing complementary
information on the strain and number of layers of the material.
Funder
HORIZON EUROPE Marie Sklodowska-Curie
Actions
H2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie
Actions
National Science Foundation
Subject
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
9 articles.
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