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Near-Field Optical Spectroscopy: Enhancing the Light Budget
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Extract
The near-field scanning optical microscope, or NSOM, provides spectroscopists with resolution beneath the diffraction limit. In the NSOM, an optical aperture smaller than the wavelength λ of the probe radiation is scanned in the near-field of a sample. Pixels are serially gathered and then constituted as a computer-generated image. Spectroscopic NSOM investigations demonstrating sub-λ, resolution include studies of photoluminescence, Raman spectroscopy, and single molecule fluorescence. Results of nano-Raman spectroscopy on semiconducting Rb-doped KTP are shown in figure 1. Figure la is a topographic image of the sample showing a square Rb-doped region in an otherwise undoped sample. Figure lc is a NSOM region of the corner of the doped region, and figure lb is an image of the same region taken within a Raman line. While these data do provide sub-λ spectroscopic resolution and other interesting features, the weak signal provided by current NSOM technologies and the low quantum efficiency of the Raman effect necessitated development of a very low-drift microscope and inconveniently long collection times.
- Type
- Optical Microanalysis
- Information
- Microscopy and Microanalysis , Volume 3 , Issue S2: Proceedings: Microscopy & Microanalysis '97, Microscopy Society of America 55th Annual Meeting, Microbeam Analysis Society 31st Annual Meeting, Histochemical Society 48th Annual Meeting, Cleveland, Ohio, August 10-14, 1997 , August 1997 , pp. 815 - 816
- Copyright
- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America 1997
References
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5. Research supported by US Army (DAAH04-93-G-164 and DAAH04-G-064) and NSF (DMR-9300041).Google Scholar
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