Chemical imaging with a confocal scanning Fourier-transform-Raman microscope

Appl Opt. 1994 Nov 1;33(31):7520-8. doi: 10.1364/AO.33.007520.

Abstract

Traditional approaches in confocal microscopy have focused on techniques to generate volumetric intensity or phase images of an object. In these different imaging modes the scattered optical-field properties depend on local refractive index and absorption, properties not unique to a given material. We report here on a confocal microscope that uses Raman scattered light to generate volumetric chemical images of a material. We designed and built a prototype instrument, called a confocal scanning laser Raman microscope, that combines a confocal scanning laser microscope with a Fourier-transform-Raman spectrometer. The high depth and lateral spatial resolution of the confocal optics design define a volume element from which the Raman scattered light is collected, and the spectrometer analyzes its spectral content. The sample is scanned through the microscope probe volume, and a chemical image isgenerated based on the content of the Raman spectrum extracted from each scan position in the sample. The results inclu e instrument characterization measurements and examples of confocal chemical imaging.