Super-resolution optical imaging of soft matter
Abstract
Conventional optical microscopy techniques suffer from a physical barrier known as the diffraction
limit or Abbe limit. Optical imaging beyond the diffraction limit helps to understand the physics of
liquid crystals at the nanoscale. Super-resolution microscopic techniques such as structured
illumination microscopy (SIM), stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy and RESOLFT
(reversible saturable optically linear fluorescent transitions) microscopy, stochastic optical
reconstruction microscopy (STORM), photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) have been
used to study the spatial structures of living and non-living systems. It has been showed that
three-dimensional STORM imaging can achieve 10 times better spatial resolution than the
diffraction limit. In this project, super-resolution optical images of soft matter systems such as
liquid crystals and polymers have been analysed. The images used in this project were taken
from SIM and STORM experiments. The images include photographs of liquid crystals in an
unusual nematic (twist bend nematic) and smectic (dark conglomerate) phases and
photopolymerised liquid crystal phases. The image analysis provided insights into the structural
.arrangement in novel liquid crystal phases