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Time-correlated single-photon counting picosecond systems

The time-resolved techniques that are usually used for FLIM are based on electronic-basis detection methods such as the time-correlated single photon counting or streak camera. Therefore, the time resolution of the FLIM system has been limited by several tens of picoseconds. However, fluorescence microscopy has the potential to provide much more information if we can observe the fluorescence dynamics in a microscopic region with higher time resolution. Given this background, we developed two types of ultrafast time-resolved fluorescence microscopes, i.e., the femtosecond fluorescence up-conversion microscope and the... [Pg.68]

Time-Correlated Single-Photon Counting. For the application of TCSPC in the picosecond time domain, lasers with pulses whose half-widths are 20 ps or less are used. For better time resolution, the combination of a microchan-nel plate photomultiplier tube (MCP-PMT) and a fast constant fraction discriminator (CFD) are used instead of a conventional photomultiplier tube (PMT). A TCSPC system with a time response as short as 40 ps has at its core a Nd YLF (neodymium yttrium lithium fluoride) laser generating 70-ps, 1053-nm pulses at... [Pg.880]

Sample preparation was given elsewhere [2]. Femtosecond fluorescence upconversion and picosecond time-correlated single-photon-counting set-ups were employed for the measurement of the fluorescence transients. The system response (FWHM) of the femtosecond fluorescence up-conversion and time-correlated single-photon-counting setups are 280 fs and 16 ps, respectively [3] The measured transients were fitted to multiexponential functions convoluted with the system response function. After deconvolution the time resolution was 100 fs. In the upconversion experiments, excitation was at 350 nm, the transients were measured from 420 nm upto 680 nm. Experiments were performed under magic angle conditions (to remove the fluorescence intensity effects of rotational motions of the probed molecules), as well as under polarization conditions in order to obtain the time evolution of the fluorescence anisotropy. [Pg.500]

The great sensitivity of fluorescence spectral, intensity, decay and anisotropy measurements has led to their widespread use in synthetic polymer systems, where interpretations of results are based upon order, molecular motion, and electronic energy migration (1). Time-resolved methods down to picosecond time-resolution using a variety of detection methods but principally that of time-correlated single photon counting, can in principle, probe these processes in much finer detail than steady-state techniques, but the complexity of most synthetic polymers poses severe problems in interpretation of results. [Pg.308]


See other pages where Time-correlated single-photon counting picosecond systems is mentioned: [Pg.83]    [Pg.537]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.537]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.484]   
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Correlation time systems

Correlation times

Counting systems

Photon correlation

Photon correlators

Photon counting

Photon counts

Picosecond

Picosecond Photon Correlation

Single photon-timing

Single system

Single-photon counting system

Time-correlated single photon

Time-correlated single photon counting

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