Fluorescence lifetime imaging or FLIM is a technique for producing an image based on the differences in the exponential decay rate of the fluorescence from a fluorescent sample. It can be used as an imaging technique in confocal microscopy and other microscope systems.
The lifetime of the fluorophore signal, rather than its intensity, is used to create the image in FLIM. This has the advantage of minimizing the effect of photon scattering in thick layers of sample. FLIM is very useful for biomedical tissue imaging, allowing to probe greater tissue depths than conventional fluorescence microscopy.
where
In the above, is time, is the fluorescence lifetime, is the initial fluorescence at , and are the rates for each decay pathway, at least one of which must be the fluorescence decay rate . More importantaly, the lifetime, , is independent of the initial intensity of the emitted light. This can be utilized for making non-intensity based measurements in chemical sensing.
When a population of fluorophores is excited by an ultrashort or delta pulse of light, the time-resolved fluorescence will decay exponentially as described above. However, if the excitation pulse or detection response is wide, the measured fluorescence, M(t), will not be purely exponential. The instrumental response function, IRF(t) will be convolved or blended with the decay function, F(t).
The decay function (and corresponding lifetimes) cannot be recovered by direct deconvolution using Fourier transforms because division by zero will produce errors and noise will be amplified. However, the instrumental response of the source, detector, and electronics can be measured, usually from scattered excitation light. The IRF can then be convoluted with a trial decay function to produce a calculated fluorescence, which can be compared to the measured fluorescence. The parameters for the trial decay function can be varied until the calculated and measured fluorescence curves fit well. This process is known as reconvolution or reiterative convolution, and can be performed quickly by several software packages.
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