Mid-infrared photothermal microscopy
is a new chemical imaging
technology in which a visible beam senses the photothermal effect
induced by a pulsed infrared laser. This technology provides infrared
spectroscopic information at submicrometer spatial resolution and
enables infrared spectroscopy and imaging of living cells and organisms.
Yet, current mid-infrared photothermal imaging sensitivity suffers
from a weak dependence of scattering on the temperature, and the image
quality is vulnerable to the speckles caused by scattering. Here,
we present a novel version of mid-infrared photothermal microscopy
in which thermosensitive fluorescent probes are harnessed to sense
the mid-infrared photothermal effect. The fluorescence intensity can
be modulated at the level of 1% per Kelvin, which is 100 times larger
than the modulation of scattering intensity. In addition, fluorescence
emission is free of interference, thus much improving the image quality.
Moreover, fluorophores can target specific organelles or biomolecules,
thus augmenting the specificity of photothermal imaging. Spectral
fidelity is confirmed through fingerprinting a single bacterium. Finally,
the photobleaching issue is successfully addressed through the development
of a wide-field fluorescence-detected mid-infrared photothermal microscope
which allows video rate bond-selective imaging of biological specimens.