In Press, 发布时间: 2025年12月03日 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.5546 浏览次数: 171
评审: Komuraiah MyakalaRahul Jaywant patilAnonymous reviewer(s)
Abstract
Conventional Schlieren optics equipment typically operates on a large optical table, which is inconvenient for imaging small samples or thin layers of transparent materials. We describe an imaging device based on Schlieren optics, aided by a slight shift in light reflected from two surfaces. The device is designed to place the sample between a thick concave mirror and a camera next to a point-light source located at the spherical origin of the concave mirror. The compact device is portable and convenient. It is similarly capable of sensitively detecting patterns in gaseous or liquid media created by a density gradient when the optical effect is too subtle to be detectable by regular cameras and scanners. The new device is particularly suitable for detecting translucent samples, including thin fluid films on the order of micrometers, tissue slices, and other biological samples. We show two examples of how our device can be applied to imaging biological samples. The first compares images acquired using several techniques of a bacterial swarm spread over an agar plate; the second is a set of images of human cells grown on a tissue culture plate.
Key features
• The protocol presents the design of a compact Schlieren optics device (CSOD), with image boundaries enhanced by a slight shift in two overlapping, virtual images.
• The CSOD captures high-resolution images of a transparent medium with variation in thickness or index of refraction.
• The CSOD can detect transparent samples with thickness in the order of 1 µm; it is simple to build, user-friendly, and portable.
• As a cheaper and portable complement to a phase contrast microscope, the device can image large samples more conveniently.
Background
Traditional shadowgraphy is based on the slight shift of rays refracted from a transparent sample. Passing through a transparent medium with a variation in refractive index, such as a stream of gas or compressed air, the light ray is refracted, causing a slight change in direction by an angle [1]. Following the invention of German physicist August Toepler in 1864, a variety of shadowgraph imaging techniques, collectively known as Schlieren optics, have been developed to observe fluid flow by detecting light deflection caused by density gradients that vary the refractive index [2]. Thus, Schlieren optics are widely applied to capture the contours of transparent specimens, including liquids, gases, and air flows [3,4].
Modern Schlieren setups utilize optical components available from global vendors, such as Edmund Optics (https://www.edmundoptics.com). A typical setup involves an optical table, a laser, beam splitters, compound lenses, and a knife-edge strategically and precisely positioned on the optical path. The technique has also been applied in combination with interferometry [5]. A more recent technique, known as the BOS (background-oriented Schlieren) [6], detects fluid non-uniformities by observing the distortion to the image of background grids and is digitally processed to construct the Schlieren image with improved sensitivity.
Although Schlieren systems can effectively identify fluid flow patterns with high sensitivity, they can be affected by disturbances from the transparent medium, such as ambient air, surrounding the test samples [7]. The caveat of large, commercial Schlieren systems is that the light-path distance is rather long [8], especially compared to thin samples of interest. This might explain why we found few previously reported high-quality images on flow patterns of transparent fluids in small liquid volumes (on the order of microliters) or thin layers of fluid, particularly those of biological origin.
Here, we present the design of a compact Schlieren optics device (CSOD). Using a thick concave mirror, we show through optical alignment and calibration that CSOD capitalizes on light’s diffraction and interference properties to improve image contrast and sensitivity. We illustrate the usefulness of a simple CSOD in imaging bacterial swarm fronts and clusters of human cells on a culture dish. The simple device described in this protocol may lead to numerous applications, particularly in research involving aqueous, transparent, and biological materials.
Equipment
1. 3D printer with a printing bed larger than 20 × 20 cm (such as an Ender 3s SE)
2. Computer (a PC with Windows 10 version 19041.0 or higher)
3. Soldering iron
4. Screwdrivers (Phillips and Allen)
5. Utility knife
6. Compressed air duster
A. Shopping list
The following is a list of parts, including links to sources for purchase, which we used to construct a CSOD.
1. Camera: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07CSKXB72
2. Support stand: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08M37PFQP
3. Mirror: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B079836VBW
4. Lift holder: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07SX15JHK
5. X-Y stage: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07VPQT851
6. Power cord: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BVBC3DV4
7. Magnet: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09Y82MTRV
8. 3m screws: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BMQ2KJK6
9. 3D printer filament: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BV2L2ZTR
10. Camera mount adapter: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BNQDWYGW
11. Camera mount conversion mount: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CKP2J6XM
12. Camera clamp: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CB5JKTBH
13. Led 3 mm: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B077XD19J5
14. Suction cup: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09BTW2148
15. Solder: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003X3VUK0
B. 3D-printed parts
1. Adjustment bracket.STL ×1
2. Base adapter.STL ×10
3. Holding rod.STL ×1
4. Lamp rod.STL ×1
5. Mirror arm.STL ×2
6. Nob.STL ×2
7. Rod adapter.STL ×1
8. Sample holding ring.STL ×1
9. Sample rod adapter.STL 1
10. Slide adapter.STL 1
11. Top adapter.STL ×1
Software and datasets
1. Windows Camera https://apps.microsoft.com/detail/9wzdncrfjbbg?hl=en-US&gl=US
2. ImageJ (v1.54h) https://imagej.net/ij/download.html
Procedure
文章信息
稿件历史记录
提交日期: Sep 8, 2025
接收日期: Nov 13, 2025
在线发布日期: Dec 3, 2025
版权信息
© 2026 The Author(s); This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
如何引用
Tong, Y. and Tang, J. X. (2026). A Compact Schlieren Optics Device for Imaging Biological Samples. Bio-protocol 16(1): e5546. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.5546.
分类
生物物理学 >
生物科学
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