We report a new physical configuration for the detection of perpendicular light scatter or fluorescence in flow cytometry when using a fluid stream in air. This configuration increases the signal-to-noise ratio and narrows the coefficient of variation for uniformly sized latex spheres when compared to using a microscope objective to collect such light. The new technique views the scattered light that is trapped within the optical waveguide that is naturally formed by the flow stream in air. One efficient and simple way to detect the light trapped within this optical waveguide is to place one end of a fiber optic, with a conically polished tip and sufficiently large-core diameter, directly into the flow stream and to place an optical detector at the fiber's other end. For perpendicular light scatter, the flow-stream waveguide achieves high collection efficiency (NA = 0.88) as well as high efficiency of optical through put due to lack of surfaces between the light scatterers and the detector. We obtained 10-fold higher signals with this technique than with a long-working-distance microscope objective. The flow-stream waveguide is also much easier to align than traditional microscope-lens-based systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0320(19960501)24:1<27::AID-CYTO3>3.0.CO;2-F | DOI Listing |
Electrophoresis
July 2012
DTU Nanotech-Department of Micro and Nanotechnology, Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark.
In this paper, we describe a microfluidic device composed of integrated microoptical elements and a two-layer microchannel structure for highly sensitive light scattering detection of micro/submicrometer-sized particles. In the two-layer microfluidic system, a sample flow stream is first constrained in the out-of-plane direction into a narrow sheet, and then focused in-plane into a small core region, obtaining on-chip three-dimensional (3D) hydrodynamic focusing. All the microoptical elements, including waveguides, microlens, and fiber-to-waveguide couplers, and the in-plane focusing channels are fabricated in one SU-8 layer by standard photolithography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytometry
October 1999
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94551, USA.
Background: We previously reported a new optical configuration, in which both the side scatter and the fluorescence are collected using the index-guided, total internal reflection of a flow stream in air (the flow-stream waveguide).
Methods: Using a mixture of 0.202-microm and 0.
Cytometry
May 1996
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, California 94551, USA.
We report a new physical configuration for the detection of perpendicular light scatter or fluorescence in flow cytometry when using a fluid stream in air. This configuration increases the signal-to-noise ratio and narrows the coefficient of variation for uniformly sized latex spheres when compared to using a microscope objective to collect such light. The new technique views the scattered light that is trapped within the optical waveguide that is naturally formed by the flow stream in air.
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