1st Edition

Super-Resolution Microscopy for Material Science

Edited By Lorenzo Albertazzi, Peter Zijlstra Copyright 2024
248 Pages 84 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

248 Pages 84 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

248 Pages 84 Color & 3 B/W Illustrations
by CRC Press

Optical microscopy is one of the most frequently used tools in chemistry and the life sciences. However, its limited resolution hampers the use of optical imaging to many other relevant problems in different disciplines. Super-Resolution Microscopy (SRM) is a new technique that allows the resolution of objects down to a few billionth of meters (nanometers), ten times better than classical... Read more

Chapter 1: Introduction to super-resolution microscopy and its importance for materials science. Chapter 2: Localization Microscopy. Chapter 3: Stimulated emission depletion microscopy. Chapter 4: Structured illumination microscopy (SIM). Chapter 5: Other super-resolution approaches. Chapter 6: Quantitative Analysis for Single-Molecule Localization Microscopy: “From PSF to Information”. Chapter 7: Single Molecule Localization and Nanoscopy through Sequential Structured Illumination. Chapter 8: Measuring molecule numbers in nano-scale assemblies with single-molecule localization microscopy. Chapter 9: Super-resolution microscopy in colloid science. Chapter 10: SRM application to supramolecular structures. Chapter 11: Super-resolution microscopy application to nanomedicine. Chapter 12: Super-resolution microscopy applications to catalysis. Index.

Biography

Lorenzo Albertazzi is Associate Professor at Eindhoven University, The Netherlands, within the department of Biomedical Engineering. He obtained a MSc in Chemistry (2007) and a PhD in Biophysics (2011) from Scuola Normale Superiore (Pisa, Italy). He then joined Eindhoven University of Technology as postdoctoral researcher and in 2014 he became a NWO/VENI fellow. In 2015, he moved to Barcelona (Spain) to the Institute of Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC) to start the 'Nanoscopy for Nanomedicine' group. Since 2018 he is associate professor at TU/e leading the research group Nanoscopy for Nanomedicine.

Peter Zijlstra is an Associate Professor at Eindhoven University, The Netherlands, in the research group Molecular Biosensing within the department of Applied Physics. He studied Applied Physics at the University of Twente (Enschede, The Netherlands), where he obtained his MSc degree in 2005. In 2009, he received his PhD from Swinburne University of Technology (Melbourne, Australia), where he studied the photothermal properties of single plasmonic nanoparticles with applications in optical data storage. After a postdoctoral fellowship in the lab of Prof. Michel Orrit at Leiden University (The Netherlands) he moved to Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e, The Netherlands). He is a core member of the Institute for Complex Molecular Systems at TU/e, wherein groups from different disciplines (chemistry, physics, biomedical engineering, mathematics) collaborate on multidisciplinary research topics.