4.8 Article

Fast wide-field upconversion luminescence lifetime thermometry enabled by single-shot compressed ultrahigh-speed imaging

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26701-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2017-05959, RGPAS-2017-507845, I2IPJ-555593-20, RGPIN-2018-06217, RGPAS-2018-522650]
  2. Ministere de l'Economie et de l'Innovation du Quebec [37146]
  3. Canadian Cancer Society [707056]
  4. New Frontier in Research Fund [NFRFE-2020-00267]
  5. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Nature et Technologies [2019-NC-252960]
  6. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante [267406, 280229]
  7. Canada Foundation for Innovation [37146]

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The article introduces a method for wide-field video-rate upconversion temperature sensing using compressive sensing technology, which enables video temperature measurement on dynamic samples.
Photoluminescence lifetime imaging of upconverting nanoparticles is increasingly featured in recent progress in optical thermometry. Despite remarkable advances in photoluminescent temperature indicators, existing optical instruments lack the ability of wide-field photoluminescence lifetime imaging in real time, thus falling short in dynamic temperature mapping. Here, we report video-rate upconversion temperature sensing in wide field using single-shot photoluminescence lifetime imaging thermometry (SPLIT). Developed from a compressed-sensing ultrahigh-speed imaging paradigm, SPLIT first records wide-field luminescence intensity decay compressively in two views in a single exposure. Then, an algorithm, built upon the plug-and-play alternating direction method of multipliers, is used to reconstruct the video, from which the extracted lifetime distribution is converted to a temperature map. Using the core/shell NaGdF4:Er3+,Yb3+/NaGdF4 upconverting nanoparticles as the lifetime-based temperature indicators, we apply SPLIT in longitudinal wide-field temperature monitoring beneath a thin scattering medium. SPLIT also enables video-rate temperature mapping of a moving biological sample at single-cell resolution. Photoluminescence lifetime imaging of upconverting nanoparticles is useful for optical thermometry, but is limited for dynamic samples. Here, the authors present a wide-field and single shot approach based on compressive sensing, for video-rate upconversion temperature sensing of moving samples.

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