Digitally synthesized beat frequency-multiplexed fluorescence lifetime spectroscopy
Author(s) -
Jacky C. K. Chan,
Eric D. Diebold,
Brandon Buckley,
Sien Mao,
Najva Akbari,
Bahram Jalali
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
biomedical optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.362
H-Index - 86
ISSN - 2156-7085
DOI - 10.1364/boe.5.004428
Subject(s) - optics , frequency domain , frequency modulation , multiplexing , materials science , beat (acoustics) , bandwidth (computing) , phase modulation , excitation , modulation (music) , fluorescence , laser , physics , phase noise , computer science , telecommunications , acoustics , quantum mechanics , computer vision
Frequency domain fluorescence lifetime imaging is a powerful technique that enables the observation of subtle changes in the molecular environment of a fluorescent probe. This technique works by measuring the phase delay between the optical emission and excitation of fluorophores as a function of modulation frequency. However, high-resolution measurements are time consuming, as the excitation modulation frequency must be swept, and faster low-resolution measurements at a single frequency are prone to large errors. Here, we present a low cost optical system for applications in real-time confocal lifetime imaging, which measures the phase vs. frequency spectrum without sweeping. Deemed Lifetime Imaging using Frequency-multiplexed Excitation (LIFE), this technique uses a digitally-synthesized radio frequency comb to drive an acousto-optic deflector, operated in a cat's-eye configuration, to produce a single laser excitation beam modulated at multiple beat frequencies. We demonstrate simultaneous fluorescence lifetime measurements at 10 frequencies over a bandwidth of 48 MHz, enabling high speed frequency domain lifetime analysis of single- and multi-component sample mixtures.
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