posted on 2020-11-12, 21:06authored bySonglin Yang, Yong-Hong Ye, Qinfang Shi, Jiayu Zhang
The
lateral resolution beyond the classical diffraction limit can be achieved
by the combination of a dielectric microsphere and an optical microscope,
and this paper utilizes microsphere-assisted microscopy as a platform
to study the mechanism of using optical microstructure to realize
super-resolution imaging. A barium titanate glass (BTG) microsphere
was immersed into ethanol, and the imaging resolution of a BTG microsphere-assisted
microscope was recorded in situ during evaporation of ethanol, while
a numerical simulation was done to study how the ethanol’s
immersion depth affected the BTG microsphere’s capability to
convert evanescent waves in the near field to propagating waves in
the far field. The experimental trend of the imaging resolution versus
the immersion depth was consistent with that of the conversion capability.
Our results indicate that super-resolution may come from the conversion
of evanescent waves into propagating waves by the optical microstructure.