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NOMARSKI INTERFERENCE
CONTRAST OPTICAL MICROSCOPY



       M.SARAVANAKUMAR
       NANOSCIENCE AND TECHNOLOY
INTRODUCTION
• Georges (Jerzy) Nomarski (1919–1997) developed
  modification of interference microscopes.
• Nomarski microscope is sometimes called a differential
  interference contrast (DIC)microscope or a polarization
  interference contrast microscope.
• The design of the Nomarski interference-contrast
  microscope for transmitted light is described for two
  different techniques.
• One for double-beam interference microscopy, and
  compensation of interference fringes.
components of the basic differential
interference contrast microscope setup.
Interference of light
• Two waves superimpose to form a resultant waves of greater
  or lower amplitude.
• Destructive Interference -Two or more than two waves -
  sum of variations has smaller amplitude than component
  variations.
• Constructive Interference- sum of variations will have
  bigger amplitude than any of components individually




Constructive Interference   Destructive Interference
Wollaston prism
• Invented by William Hyde Wollaston.
• Wollaston prisms - made of two layers of a crystalline
  substance, such as quartz - due to the variation of
  refractive index depending on the polarisation of the light,
  splits the light according to its polarisation.
• It seperates randomly polaraised or unpolarised light into
  two orthogonal linearly polarised outgoing beams.
NOMARSKI PRISM
            It consists of two birefrigent crystal wedges.
• One of the wedges is identical to a conventional Wollaston wedge
  and has the optical axis oriented parallel to the surface of the prism.




•  The second wedge of the prism is modified by cutting the crystal in
  such a manner that the optical axis is oriented obliquely with
  respect to the flat surface of the prism.
• The Nomarski modification causes the light rays to come to a focal
  point outside the body of the prism, and allows greater flexibility so
  that when setting up the microscope the prism can be actively
  focused.
CONDENSER
•    Main components of the optical system –condenser is a lens
    concentrate light from illuminating source –focused through
    the object &magnified by objective lens.

• The two rays are focused by the condenser for passage through the
  sample. These two rays are focused so they will pass through two
  adjacent points in the sample, around 0.2 μm apart.

• The sample is effectively illuminated by two coherent light sources,
  one with 0 polarisation and the other with 90 polarisation.
CONTRAST

• The contrast is achieved by splitting the illuminating beam into
  two beams displased by short distance on the sample surface
  followed by reflection and reconstitution of the reflected beams.

   Optical path length changes –change in the index of refraction
RESOLUTION OF OPTICAL
                MICROSCOPE
• Resolution of an optical microscope is depends upon wavelenth of
  illuminating light and the numerical aperture(NA) of the objective
  lens.

                             R=0.61 /NA

• The resolution limit of the optical microscope is approimately0.25
  µm.
Differential interference contrast (DIC)
                                                  Specimen
                                           (inhomogen phase object)
                      Prism                                               DIC prism
                    (Nomarski)                                           (Nomarski)




    Polarisator                                                                       Analysator
                                                                   Phase
                                                                 difference



unpolarized    linear       two vertical                                            linear polarized
   light      polarized      polarized                                                   light
                light         waves                                               (analysator vertical
                                                                                    vs. polarisator)
Differential interference contrast
                   microscopy
• DIC works by separating a polarised light
  source into two orthogonally polarized
  mutually coherent parts which are
  spatially displaced (sheared) at the
  sample plane, and recombined before
  observation.
• The interference of the two parts at
  recombination is sensitive to their optical
  path difference (i.e. the product of
  refractive index and geometric path
  length).
• Adding an adjustable offset phase
  determining the interference at zero
  optical path difference in the sample, the
  contrast is proportional to the path length
  gradient along the shear direction.
• Light passes through a polariser and is reflected
  downward toward birefringent crystals Wollaston prism .
  Light is split into two mutually perpendicular polarsied
  components that move at different velocities with an
  angular divergence(d).

• After emerging from the prism and reflecting off the
  sample -two beams recombine by passing once again
  through the wollaston prism in the opposite direction.
• The reconstituted beams –passes through an analyser –
  intensity changes observed .
.
• The polarised light enters the first Nomarski-modified
                                 .
  Wollaston prism and is separated into two rays polarised at
  90 to each other, the sampling and reference rays.
• Microscope image contains contrast effects –depends on
  difference in optical path length by changes in the
  geometrical of the surface & difference in variation in index
  of refraction-across the phase boundary
• Intensity variations seen-when monochromatic light
  illuminates a substrate.
• Sample consists two phases with different refractive indices.
• Optical path differences between the two reflected light
  beams –gives intensity variation .
• Interference contrast maximised in a direction parallel to the
  maximum displacement of the two beams & zero in the
  orthogonal direction
The micrographs are taken under identical polariser,analyser &
wollaston prism settings,but the sample(a) has been rotated
90˚ compared to (b).
• Interference contrast image in (a)
   clearly shows ,when polariser,
   analyser, & prism are adjusted to
   maximum contrast.
• Contrast disappears –sample
   rotates 90˚-extremely hard to
   see(b).
• When the polarizer before the
   prism, or the analyzer before the
   detector, is rotated, the relative
   intensities of the two orthogonal
   polarized beams change, and the
   colors and contrast change.
Advantages and disadvantages

• Better resolution-than other optical microscope
• The main limitation of DIC is its requirement for a
  transparent sample of fairly similar refractive index to its
  surroundings. DIC is unsuitable (in biology) for thick
  samples, such as tissue slices, and highly pigmented
  cells.
• DIC is also unsuitable for most non biological uses
  because of its dependence on polarisation, which many
  physical samples would affect.
THANK YOU

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Nomarski dic

  • 1. NOMARSKI INTERFERENCE CONTRAST OPTICAL MICROSCOPY M.SARAVANAKUMAR NANOSCIENCE AND TECHNOLOY
  • 2. INTRODUCTION • Georges (Jerzy) Nomarski (1919–1997) developed modification of interference microscopes. • Nomarski microscope is sometimes called a differential interference contrast (DIC)microscope or a polarization interference contrast microscope. • The design of the Nomarski interference-contrast microscope for transmitted light is described for two different techniques. • One for double-beam interference microscopy, and compensation of interference fringes.
  • 3. components of the basic differential interference contrast microscope setup.
  • 4. Interference of light • Two waves superimpose to form a resultant waves of greater or lower amplitude. • Destructive Interference -Two or more than two waves - sum of variations has smaller amplitude than component variations. • Constructive Interference- sum of variations will have bigger amplitude than any of components individually Constructive Interference Destructive Interference
  • 5. Wollaston prism • Invented by William Hyde Wollaston. • Wollaston prisms - made of two layers of a crystalline substance, such as quartz - due to the variation of refractive index depending on the polarisation of the light, splits the light according to its polarisation. • It seperates randomly polaraised or unpolarised light into two orthogonal linearly polarised outgoing beams.
  • 6. NOMARSKI PRISM It consists of two birefrigent crystal wedges. • One of the wedges is identical to a conventional Wollaston wedge and has the optical axis oriented parallel to the surface of the prism. • The second wedge of the prism is modified by cutting the crystal in such a manner that the optical axis is oriented obliquely with respect to the flat surface of the prism. • The Nomarski modification causes the light rays to come to a focal point outside the body of the prism, and allows greater flexibility so that when setting up the microscope the prism can be actively focused.
  • 7.
  • 8. CONDENSER • Main components of the optical system –condenser is a lens concentrate light from illuminating source –focused through the object &magnified by objective lens. • The two rays are focused by the condenser for passage through the sample. These two rays are focused so they will pass through two adjacent points in the sample, around 0.2 μm apart. • The sample is effectively illuminated by two coherent light sources, one with 0 polarisation and the other with 90 polarisation.
  • 9. CONTRAST • The contrast is achieved by splitting the illuminating beam into two beams displased by short distance on the sample surface followed by reflection and reconstitution of the reflected beams. Optical path length changes –change in the index of refraction
  • 10. RESOLUTION OF OPTICAL MICROSCOPE • Resolution of an optical microscope is depends upon wavelenth of illuminating light and the numerical aperture(NA) of the objective lens. R=0.61 /NA • The resolution limit of the optical microscope is approimately0.25 µm.
  • 11. Differential interference contrast (DIC) Specimen (inhomogen phase object) Prism DIC prism (Nomarski) (Nomarski) Polarisator Analysator Phase difference unpolarized linear two vertical linear polarized light polarized polarized light light waves (analysator vertical vs. polarisator)
  • 12. Differential interference contrast microscopy • DIC works by separating a polarised light source into two orthogonally polarized mutually coherent parts which are spatially displaced (sheared) at the sample plane, and recombined before observation. • The interference of the two parts at recombination is sensitive to their optical path difference (i.e. the product of refractive index and geometric path length). • Adding an adjustable offset phase determining the interference at zero optical path difference in the sample, the contrast is proportional to the path length gradient along the shear direction.
  • 13. • Light passes through a polariser and is reflected downward toward birefringent crystals Wollaston prism . Light is split into two mutually perpendicular polarsied components that move at different velocities with an angular divergence(d). • After emerging from the prism and reflecting off the sample -two beams recombine by passing once again through the wollaston prism in the opposite direction. • The reconstituted beams –passes through an analyser – intensity changes observed . .
  • 14. • The polarised light enters the first Nomarski-modified . Wollaston prism and is separated into two rays polarised at 90 to each other, the sampling and reference rays. • Microscope image contains contrast effects –depends on difference in optical path length by changes in the geometrical of the surface & difference in variation in index of refraction-across the phase boundary • Intensity variations seen-when monochromatic light illuminates a substrate. • Sample consists two phases with different refractive indices. • Optical path differences between the two reflected light beams –gives intensity variation . • Interference contrast maximised in a direction parallel to the maximum displacement of the two beams & zero in the orthogonal direction
  • 15. The micrographs are taken under identical polariser,analyser & wollaston prism settings,but the sample(a) has been rotated 90˚ compared to (b). • Interference contrast image in (a) clearly shows ,when polariser, analyser, & prism are adjusted to maximum contrast. • Contrast disappears –sample rotates 90˚-extremely hard to see(b). • When the polarizer before the prism, or the analyzer before the detector, is rotated, the relative intensities of the two orthogonal polarized beams change, and the colors and contrast change.
  • 16. Advantages and disadvantages • Better resolution-than other optical microscope • The main limitation of DIC is its requirement for a transparent sample of fairly similar refractive index to its surroundings. DIC is unsuitable (in biology) for thick samples, such as tissue slices, and highly pigmented cells. • DIC is also unsuitable for most non biological uses because of its dependence on polarisation, which many physical samples would affect.