Magnetic Submicron Rods for Quantitative Viscosity Imaging Using Heterodyne Holography

Many processes in microfluidics and biology are driven or affected by viscosity. While several methods are able to measure this parameter globally, very few can provide high-resolution viscosity images. Optimizing the locality of viscosity measurements demands smaller probes but also shorter lateral...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inACS photonics Vol. 11; no. 7; pp. 2561 - 2569
Main Authors Gentner, Clémence, Berret, Jean-François, Berto, Pascal, Reichman, Sacha, Kuszelewicz, Robert, Tessier, Gilles
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 17.07.2024
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Summary:Many processes in microfluidics and biology are driven or affected by viscosity. While several methods are able to measure this parameter globally, very few can provide high-resolution viscosity images. Optimizing the locality of viscosity measurements demands smaller probes but also shorter lateral diffusion lengths and measurement times. Here, we propose to use submicrometer magnetic rods to perform high-resolution viscosity imaging. An external magnetic field forces the oscillation of superparamagnetic iron oxide rods. Under linearly polarized illumination, the rotational movement of these highly anisotropic optical scatterers induces a blinking which is analyzed by heterodyne holography. The spectral analysis of the rotation dynamics yields a regime transition frequency from which the local viscosity is deduced. Holography provides a 3D optical field reconstruction and 3D superlocalization of the rods, which allows super-resolved viscosity measurements. Relying on the fast Brownian rotation instead of the slower translation component of nanorods therefore allows faster measurements and, crucially, smaller effective voxels for viscosity determination. We thus demonstrate that viscosity imaging is possible with a 0.5 μm3 3D resolution.
ISSN:2330-4022
2330-4022
DOI:10.1021/acsphotonics.4c00021