What is it about?
This report is about cell microscopy using a well-known electrochemical reaction that generates visible light: the phenomenon is called electrochemiluminescence (ECL) . The cells are imaged at the surface of a conducting electrode where the energy to trigger the ECL reaction is provided by the application of a potential and an external light stimulus. In brief, we use an incident and non-visible infrared light that excites a semiconductor electrode.
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Why is it important?
Firstly, the results show that this approach allows a decrease in the overpotential required to trigger the reaction at the electrode. Indeed, electrochemiluminescence usually requires high potentials. In addition, the incident infrared light brings a new dimension of control of the reaction, so of the imaging. Finally, the semiconductor involved, previously studied by our group, is very stable and the electrogenerated light is very intense.
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This page is a summary of: Infrared Photoinduced Electrochemiluminescence Microscopy of Single Cells, Chemical Science, January 2023, Royal Society of Chemistry,
DOI: 10.1039/d3sc05983a.
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