Trinocular Polarized Microscope

The Trinocular Polarized Microscope uses polarized light to study anisotropic specimens like liquid crystals and minerals.  It includes a polarizer positioned in the light path before the specimen and an analyzer placed in the light path between the observation tubes or camera port and objective rear aperture.

The microscope is equipped with two polarizing filters known as polarizer and analyzer. It includes a dividing eyepiece and a trinocular eyepiece tube that is inclined at 30° and can capture the images in 100% light flux. Long infinity objectives are present that make the field of view clear and wide. It also includes 50X ~ 600X magnification lenses, a reflected illumination system, a quadruple nosepiece, a focusing system, a puller-type Bertrand lens as an intermediate attachment, and λ, λ/4, and quarts wedge compensator.

In a polarized microscope, a polarizer transforms white light into plane-polarized light before reaching the sample.

ConductScience offers the Trinocular Polarized Microscope.

$3,900.00

Description

Features

 

  1. Adopt infinity optical system and modularization function design
  2. Wide-field plan eyepieces: field number Φ22mm
  3. Infinity long W.D plan objectives, the field of view is widely and clear
  4. Coaxial coarse/fine focus system, with tensional adjustable and up stop, minimum division of fine focusing: 2μm
  5. The polarizing unit can be moved out or into the optical path, polarizer and analyzer can be rotated from 0°to 360°
  6. Rotatable stage, 360° graduated in 1° increment, minimum retardation resolution 6′ center adjustable and with tightener Stage vertical effective movement up to 30mm
  7. Wide voltage range power supply (85-265V 50/60Hz), 6V30W halogen lamp, brightness adjustable
  8. Trinocular can be observed for eyepieces and microphotography in 100% light flux, suits for low illuminance microphotography

Specifications


Eyepiece

WF 10X (Φ22mm)

Dividing eyepiece (Φ22mm) 0.10mm/Div

Eyepiece TubeTrinocular is inclined 30° and enable to shoot in 100% light flux
Objective

Strain-free plan achromatic objective (no cover glass)

PL L5X/0.12 (Work distance):26.1 mm

PL L10X/0.25 (Work distance):20.2 mm

PL L40X/0.60£¨spring£©(Work distance):3.98 mm

PL L60X/0.70£¨spring£©(Work distance):3.18 mm

Magnification50X~600X
Reflected Illumination System

6V30W halogen, brightness enables control.

The polarizer can be rotated 360°.

The analyzer can be rotatable 360° with scale and minimum vernier

Integrated field and aperture diaphragm.

NosepieceQuadruple (the center of nosepiece is adjustable )
Focus SystemCoaxial coarse/fine focus system, with tension adjustable and up stop, minimum division of fine focusing is 2.0μm
Intermediate attachmentPuller type Bertrand lens
Compensatorλ , λ/4 and quarts wedge compensator

Documentation

Introduction

The Trinocular Polarized Microscope uses polarized light to study anisotropic specimens like liquid crystals and minerals. It includes a polarizer positioned in the light path before the specimen and an analyzer placed in the light path between the observation tubes or camera port and objective rear aperture. The light coming from the halogen lamp passes through the polarizer and falls on the birefringent sample that splits the beam; this beam then passes through the analyzer. The final images of the specimen are then captured through the trinocular head camera. The polarizer and analyzer can be rotated from 0°to 360° into or out of the optical path to view the anisotropic sample accurately. Conduct Science’s trinocular polarized microscope comes with a compensator to enhance or reduce the optical path difference. 

Apparatus

The microscope is equipped with two polarizing filters known as polarizer and analyzer. It includes a dividing eyepiece and a trinocular eyepiece tube that is inclined at 30° and can capture the images in 100% light flux. Long infinity objectives are present that make the field of view clear and wide. It also includes 50X ~ 600X magnification lenses, reflected illumination system, quadruple nosepiece, focusing system, puller type Bertrand lens as an intermediate attachment, and λ, λ/4, and quarts wedge compensator.

Principle

In a polarized microscope, a polarizer transforms white light into plane-polarized light before reaching the sample. The birefringent (double-refracting) specimen splits the beam, which is passed through a second polarizing filter placed parallelly to the polarizer known as an analyzer. Finally, high-contrast images are captured through the trinocular head camera. 

 

Protocol
  1. Connect the microscope to an electric supply and turn it on. 
  2. Lower the microscope’s stage and place the glass slide holding the specimen on it.
  3. Use slide clips to hold the slide in place.
  4. Use the coarse focus knob to raise the stage until the specimen is inside the field of view of the objective lens.
  5. Adjust the brightness by using the intensity knob.
  6. Use the fine focus dial to get a clear picture.
  7. Center the Bertrand lens by turning the screws on the Bertrand lens plate.
  8. Set up the trinocular head with the camera tube attached. 
 
Applications

The Trinocular Polarized Microscope is known for its applications in the geological sciences, which concentrate on studying minerals in thin rock slices. However, many other materials may conveniently be investigated with polarized light, including natural and manufactured minerals, i.e., ceramics, cement composites, mineral fibers, polymers, urea. The microscope is also used in pharmaceutics, forensic medicines, geology, chemistry, biology, metallurgy, petrology, mineralogy, toxicology, and the discovery of the history of rock formation, starch, wood, and a plethora of biological macromolecules. Some specific applications of the microscope are discussed below:

Study of Gout Crystals 

Monosodium urate crystals are studied using crossed polarization in the polarized microscope.

 

Collagen Study

Collagen is an anisotropic structure that displays the phenomena of birefringence, which the polarized microscope may selectively observe. Collagen fibers serve a crucial function in modeling the biological behavior of different clinical lesions and guiding the epithelium of its bystanders during normal odontogenesis (Kiresur et al., 2019).

Structure of the uroliths

Polienko (2019) used the polarized microscope to study uroliths’ surface morphology and mineral composition.

Study of Malarial Pigment Hemozoin

In a study conducted by Pirnstill and Coté (2015), a malarial pigment, hemozoin, was evaluated using a polarized microscope. Polarized light microscopy made it simpler to see the pigment, which was difficult to discern even by experienced laboratory staff. 

Polymers’ Study

Synthetic polymer chains tend to organize themselves tangentially after nucleation, and the solidified portions extend outward in a radial fashion. Spherulites, white patches with conspicuous black extinction crossings, are only observed in crossed polarized microscopes. 

Precautions
  1. Keep the microscope away from direct sunlight, extreme humidity, and dust.

  2. The light, lamp housing, and nearby components heat up during usage. Do not handle these pieces until they have cooled. Never try to hold a hot halogen bulb.

  3. Keep the main switch off while changing the halogen lamp, and change the bulb when it has been cooled down

  4. Ensure that the displayed and line voltages are the same. Using different voltages can harm the device.

  5. Don’t adjust the lenses on your own since they already come adjusted and calibrated

  6. The nosepiece and the coarse/fine focus unit have a small and accurate construction, don’t attempt to dismantle them.

  7. The outside surface of the optics should be examined and cleaned frequently using an air stream from an air bulb.

  8. Use the soft cloth or cotton swab dipped in the lens cleaning solution to clean the optical lenses

  9. Clean the lenses in a circular motion, do not use an excessive quantity of solution/solvent

Strengths and Limitations

The trinocular polarized microscope is designed to observe anisotropic substances rapidly that are impossible to study with any other microscope. The microscope offers information on absorption color and optical path boundaries between minerals with different refractive indices and differentiates between isotropic and anisotropic materials. This microscope is portable and can be taken anywhere to study the salts in mines. Liquid crystals may be analyzed using the microscope, which is used to look for optical patterns and phase defects. A crystal’s optical positivity or negativity may also be determined using it. It can identify various characteristics of particles, for example, morphology, size, surface texture, hardness, reflectivity, transparency, color, refractive index/indices, magnetism, pleochroism, dispersion staining, birefringence, extinction angle, a sign of elongation, interference figure, fluorescence, and chemical composition.

Limitations

It uses a very small quantity of samples and can’t study large amounts. It cannot display all the fibers under study. It requires a highly skilled person for its operation.

Summary
  1. The Trinocular Polarized Microscope uses polarized light to study the anisotropic specimens qualitatively and quantitively.
  2. It is equipped with two polarizing filters known as polarizer and analyzer, eyepiece, eyepiece tube, objective, magnifying lenses, nosepiece, focus system, reflected illumination system, and compensator.
  3. A polarizer transforms light into plane-polarized light before reaching the sample. The birefringent specimen splits the beam, which is passed through the analyzer. Finally, the trinocular head camera captures the images.
  4. The Trinocular Polarized Microscope is known for its applications in the geological sciences, which concentrate on studying minerals in thin rock slices
References
  1. Polienko AK. (2019). [Peculiarities morphology and structure of the uroliths]. Urologiia (Moscow, Russia : 1999), (2). Retrieved from https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31162896/
  2. ‌ Kiresur, M., Haripriya, P., Ananthaneni, A., Guduru, V., Horatti, P., & Vara, J. (2019). Collagen during odontogenesis and in ameloblastoma: A polarizing microscopic study. Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology23(3), 474. https://doi.org/10.4103/jomfp.jomfp_204_17
  3. Pirnstill, C. W., & Coté, G. L. (2015). Malaria Diagnosis Using a Mobile Phone Polarized Microscope. Scientific Reports5(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep13368

Additional information

Brand

Microscopex

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