Brillouin microscopy is an emerging optical elastography technique that can be used to assess mechanical properties of biological samples in a three-dimensional, all-optical and hence non-contact fashion. However, the low cross-section of spontaneous Brillouin scattering produces weak signals that often necessitate prolonged exposure times or illumination dosages that are potentially harmful for biological samples. Here we present a new approach for highly multiplexed and therefore rapid spectral acquisition of the Brillouin-scattered light. Specifically, by exploiting a custom-built Fourier-transform imaging spectrometer and the symmetric properties of the Brillouin spectrum, we experimentally demonstrate full-field 2D spectral Brillouin imaging of phantoms as well as biological samples, at a throughput of up to 40,000 spectra per second, with a precision of ~70 MHz and an effective 2D image acquisition speed of 0.1 Hz over a ~300 × 300 µm(2) field of view. This represents an approximately three-orders-of-magnitude improvement in speed and throughput compared with standard confocal methods, while retaining high spatial resolution and the capability to acquire three-dimensional images of photosensitive samples in biology and medicine.
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