Phase Contrast Microscopy, Dark Field Microscopy and Electron Microscopy.pptx

1,415 views 16 slides Jul 17, 2024
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About This Presentation

A detailed over view of Phase Contrast Microscopy, Dark Field Microscopy and Electron Microscopy


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UNIT I 1.4 Phase Contrast Microscopy, Dark Field Microscopy and Electron Microscopy Presented by: Mohammad Abuzar( M. Pharm ) Assistant Professor School of Pharmacy AIKTC, New Panvel .

CONTENTS 2

3 Introduction A vast portion of our knowledge of the living world comes from the field of microbiology, an area in which Antoni van Leeuwenhoek made important contributions. The microscope has evolved over the years from simple Leeuwenhoek instruments with magnifications of 300X to electron microscopes capable of magnifying more than 250,000X. A microscope is either a light microscope or an electron microscope. Illuminating specimens is done through the use of visible light or ultraviolet rays. A wide range of instruments is available, such as brightfield, darkfield, phase-contrast, and fluorescent.

4 Phase Contrast Microscopy The unstained cells of living organisms absorb very little light. If light absorption is poor, the differences in intensity distribution will be very small. As a result of this phenomenon, the cells cannot be seen under a brightfield  microscope. Using phase-contrast microscopy, light passing through a transparent specimen is phase-shifted, resulting in changes in brightness in an image. In 1934, Frits Zernike, a Dutch physicist, described it for the first time. Principle   Light is affected by phase shifts when passing through cells, but these changes cannot be seen by the human eye. Phase-contrast  microscopes can detect these phase shifts by noticing changes in image contrast caused by changes in amplitude.

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6 Working Through a collector lens, a tungsten-halogen lamp produces partially coherent illumination that is directed onto a specially designed annulus (labeled condenser annulus) built into the front focal plane of the substage condenser. A wavefront passing through an annulus illuminates a specimen and either passes through it un-deviated, or is diffracted and delayed in phase by structures within the sample. It is focused at the intermediate image plane, where phase-contrast images are observed, with the use of a phase plate to separate reflected and diffracted  light collected by the objective. Parts As an example, phase-contrast microscopy uses a  light microscope that is specially designed with a phase plate and annular diaphragm in addition to the basic components.

7 The annular diaphragm Above the condenser, it is located. A circular disk with a circular annular groove makes up the device. This groove allows  light to pass through. An annular groove on the annular diaphragm allows light to fall into the annular groove of the specimen or object to be studied. Consequently, an image appears at the back focal plane of the objective. On this annular phase plate is located each phase plate. The phase plates The plate either has a thick circular area or a thin circular groove, depending on whether it is a negative phase plate. Phase plates are made up of thick and thin areas called conjugate areas. It is a disc-shaped transparent surface. An annular diaphragm and phase plate are used in this  microscope to obtain phase contrast. The difference between direct and diffracted rays is obtained by separating them. A  light ray that travels straight through an annular groove goes outside the groove, but a  light ray whose path has been diffracted goes outside the groove.

8 Dark Field Microscopy Compared to the ordinary light microscope, this microscope has a modified condenser system, which does not directly illuminate the specimen. As light is deflected or scattered from a specimen obliquely directed toward a dark background, the specimen appears bright. In contrast to brightfield microscopy, darkfield microscopy allows observation of living specimens. Principle As  light strikes the specimen in a dark field  microscope, it scatters from being blocked off from the light source. If the background is dark, light objects with a similar refractive value will appear bright on the dark background. Objects can scatter  light in every azimuth or direction when they are struck.

9 Dark field Microscopy

10 Working The dark field  microscope is designed so that the sample is only illuminated by scattered light, eliminating dispersed light or zeroth order illumination. This is possible by introducing a condenser and/or stop below the stage so that light rays will be reflected off the object at different angles rather than being reflected directly above or below it. An individual can view a specimen in a dark field by diffracting, reflecting, and refracting  light off of an object, resulting in “a cone of light”. Microscopy on dark-grounds involves the use of a compound  light microscope called a dark ground  microscope. The most important component of the dark-ground  microscope is the cone-shaped condenser with a central circular stop, which provides  light to illuminate objects in the dark. Transmitted light in the ordinary light microscope is replaced by reflected light in this microscope. It makes it so that light does not come directly into contact with the objective lens. The reflection or scattering of light rays from the object into the objective lens causes the microorganisms to appear bright, stained, against a dark background.

11   Electron Microscopy A high-resolution image of a biological or non-biological specimen can be obtained with  electron microscopy (EM). A number of biomedical research techniques are based on this method including discovering detailed structures of tissues, cells, organelles and macromolecular complexes. The high resolution of  EM imaging is caused by the use of electrons, which have short wavelengths. When ancillary techniques (e.g., thin sectioning, immunolabeling, negative staining) are used in conjunction with  electron microscopy, specific questions can be answered. A cell's structure provides important clues as to how it functions and how it behaves under disease conditions.

12 Electron Microscopy

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14 A transmission  electron microscope (TEM) and a scanning  electron microscope (SEM) can be differentiated. Using a transmission electron microscope, thin specimens can be viewed (tissue sections, molecules, etc.), which allow electrons to pass through so an image is formed. There are several similarities between the TEM and a conventional  light microscope (compound). Additionally to imaging the interiors of cells (in thin sections), metal shadows allow investigators to observe the structure of protein molecules, and negative stains allow introspection of molecule assembly in viruses and filaments of cytoskeletal networks, as well as how proteins are arranged in cell membranes (through freeze-fracture)

15 W.B. Hugo and A.D. Russel: Pharmaceutical Microbiology, Blackwell Scientific publications, Oxford London. Prescott and Dunn., Industrial Microbiology, 4th edition, CBS Publishers & Distributors, Delhi. Pelczar , Chan Kreig , Microbiology, Tata McGraw Hill edn . Malcolm Harris, Balliere Tindall and Cox: Pharmaceutical Microbiology. Rose: Industrial Microbiology. Probisher , Hinsdill et al: Fundamentals of Microbiology, 9th ed. Japan Cooper and Gunn’s: Tutorial Pharmacy, CBS Publisher and Distribution. Peppler : Microbial Technology. I.P., B.P., U.S.P.- latest editions. Ananthnarayan : Text Book of Microbiology, Orient-Longman, Chennai Edward: Fundamentals of Microbiology. 12. N.K.Jain : Pharmaceutical Microbiology, Vallabh Prakashan , Delhi REFERENCES

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