4.7 Review

Dark-field/hyperspectral microscopy for detecting nanoscale particles in environmental nanotoxicology research

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 772, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.145478

关键词

Dark-field microscopy; Hyperspectral imaging; Environmental nanotoxicology; Biodistribution; Nanoparticles detection

资金

  1. Russian Science Foundation [20-13-00247]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [20-13-00247] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Nanoscale contaminants pose a significant threat to organisms and the environment, and traditional methods for detecting and identifying nanomaterials face challenges. Dark-field microscopy and hyperspectral imaging offer powerful tools for chemical characterization of nanoscale particles in wet samples, providing important advances in environmental nanotoxicology studies.
Nanoscale contaminants (induding engineered nanoparticles and nanoplastics) pose a significant threat to organisms and environment. Rapid and non-destructive detection and identification of nanosized materials in cells, tissues and organisms is still challenging, although a number of conventional methods exist. These approaches for nanoparticles imaging and characterisation both inside the cytoplasm and on the cell or tissue outer surfaces, such as electron or scanning probe microscopies, are unquestionably potent tools, having excellent resolution and supplemented with chemical analysis capabilities. However, imaging and detection of nanomaterials in situ, in wet unfixed and even live samples, such as living isolated cells, microorganisms, protozoans and miniature invertebrates using electron microscopy is practically impossible, because of the elaborate sample preparation requiring chemical fixation, contrast staining, matrix embedding and exposure into vacuum. Atomic force microscopy, in several cases, can be used for imaging and mechanical analysis of live cells and organisms under ambient conditions, however this technique allows for investigation of surfaces. Therefore, a different approach allowing for imaging and differentiation of nanoscale particles in wet samples is required. Dark-field microscopy as an optical microscopy technique has been popular among researchers, mostly for imaging relatively large specimens. In recent years, the so-called enhanced dark field microscopy based on using higher numerical aperture light condensers and variable numerical aperture objectives has emegred, which allows for imaging of nanoscale partides (starting from 5 nm nanospheres) using almost conventional optical microscopy methodology. Hyperspectral imaging can turn a dark-field optical microscope into a powerful chemical characterisation tool. As a result, this technique is becoming popular in environmental nanotoxicology studies. In this Review Article we introduce the reader into the methodology of enhanced dark-field and dark-field-based hyperspectral microscopy, covering the most important advances in this rapidly-expanding area of environmental nanotoxicology. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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