학술논문

Brillouin microscopy, what is it really measuring?
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods
Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter
Physics - Biological Physics
Physics - Optics
Language
Abstract
Brillouin microscopy measures compressibility, but is being increasingly used to assess stiffness of cells and tissues. Using hydrogels with tunable properties, we demonstrate that Brillouin microscopy is insensitive to stiffness of hydrated materials, but depends strongly on water content, consistent with a theoretical model of biphasic compressibility. Empirical correlations between Brillouin measurements and stiffness arise due to their mutual dependence on water content, but correlations vanish once hydration is controlled.
Comment: Updated version with expanded discussion, additional data and a mathematical model to relate Brillouin measurements to water content