Gold Standard immersion oil

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Neil Kad Neil Kad
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Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at
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Hi all,

Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.

I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.

I'm working at 488nm for your information

Thanks for your help

Neil Kad
University of Essex
Craig Brideau Craig Brideau
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal

Hi all,

Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.

I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.

I'm working at 488nm for your information

Thanks for your help

Neil Kad
University of Essex

Rietdorf, Jens Rietdorf, Jens
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

In reply to this post by Neil Kad
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
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Dear Neil,

Recently, Olympus has released a new RI 1.52 immersion oil, which they
claim to have tested against the oil Leica and Zeiss are using, and
found to be superior (lower background) in the UV and otherwise similar.

Colleagues have recently tested a cheaper oil of Merck which was
performing less good than the Leica/Zeiss.

No commercial interest in any of the above mentioned.

Best regards, jens

---
dr. jens rietdorf
head microscopy
novartis research foundation
friedrich-miescher-institute, wro1066.2.16
maulbeerstr.66, 4058 basel, switzerland
couriel:rietdorf(at)fmi(dot)ch
fon: +41616975172
fax: +41616973976



-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:[hidden email]] On
Behalf Of SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad
Sent: Wednesday, September 03, 2008 5:56 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal

Hi all,

Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.

I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to
regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.

I'm working at 488nm for your information

Thanks for your help

Neil Kad
University of Essex
Barbara Foster Barbara Foster
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

In reply to this post by Neil Kad
Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal Hi, Craig

While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the commonly used sodium D line. 

However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can, indeed, achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been used by chemical microscopists.  

For those of you interested in following through on this line of study, Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their website <a href="http://www.cargille.com). /" eudora="autourl">www.cargille.com).

Hope this was helpful,
Barbara Foster, President

Microscopy/Microscopy Education
7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
McKinney TX 75070
P: (972)924-5310
Skype: fostermme
W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com

NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED www.MicroscopyEducation.com! And don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through Dec 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.





At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Hi all,
Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.
I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
I'm working at 488nm for your information
Thanks for your help
Neil Kad
University of Essex
Craig Brideau Craig Brideau
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Thanks for the tip!  I was looking on the Cargille website at the oil specs, and most of them are 1.52XX (including A and B) except for type FF, which is 1.48.  So theoretically you could mix the FF with A or B and get somewhere between 1.52 and 1.48 depending on the ratios.  Here's the table with the info:
http://www.cargille.com/immeroilspecs.shtml

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Barbara Foster <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi, Craig

While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the commonly used sodium D line. 

However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can, indeed, achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been used by chemical microscopists.  

For those of you interested in following through on this line of study, Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their website www.cargille.com).

Hope this was helpful,
Barbara Foster, President

Microscopy/Microscopy Education
7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
McKinney TX 75070
P: (972)924-5310
Skype: fostermme
W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com

NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED www.MicroscopyEducation.com! And don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through Dec 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.





At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Hi all,
Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.
I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
I'm working at 488nm for your information
Thanks for your help
Neil Kad
University of Essex

Donnelly, Tom Donnelly, Tom
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

I think there are problems mixing different series of Cargille oils.

Their tech. Service folks can supply the full answer.

Even mixing within the same series require care that the oils are homogenous or there will be refraction within the oil drop
--------------------------
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This message was sent via Blackberry.

----- Original Message -----
From: Confocal Microscopy List <[hidden email]>
To: [hidden email] <[hidden email]>
Sent: Wed Sep 03 14:25:01 2008
Subject: Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Thanks for the tip!  I was looking on the Cargille website at the oil specs, and most of them are 1.52XX (including A and B) except for type FF, which is 1.48.  So theoretically you could mix the FF with A or B and get somewhere between 1.52 and 1.48 depending on the ratios.  Here's the table with the info:
http://www.cargille.com/immeroilspecs.shtml

Craig



On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Barbara Foster <[hidden email]> wrote:


        Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
        Hi, Craig
       
        While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the commonly used sodium D line. 
       
        However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can, indeed, achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been used by chemical microscopists.  
       
        For those of you interested in following through on this line of study, Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their website www.cargille.com). <http://www.cargille.com%29.%C2%A0/>
       
        Hope this was helpful,
        Barbara Foster, President
       
        Microscopy/Microscopy Education
        7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
        McKinney TX 75070
        P: (972)924-5310
        Skype: fostermme
        W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com
       
        <http://www.microscopyeducation.com/> NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED www.MicroscopyEducation.com <http://www.microscopyeducation.com/> ! And don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through Dec 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.
       
       
       
       
       
       
        At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
       

                Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal <http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
               
                I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.
               
                Craig
               
               
               
                On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:

                        Search the CONFOCAL archive at
                        http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal <http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal>
                       
                        Hi all,
                       
                        Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
                        background.
                       
                        I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
                        enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
                        immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
                       
                        I'm working at 488nm for your information
                       
                        Thanks for your help
                       
                        Neil Kad
                        University of Essex
                       


Jason Swedlow Jason Swedlow
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

In reply to this post by Craig Brideau
Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Hi Craig-

I'm pretty sure you want to be careful mixing the different oils-- they are of different chemistry and might produce unpredictable results.  Maybe call them and ask.  However, we always used the Cargille Laser Liquids (http://www.cargille.com/laserliq.shtml) and the mixing trick there (I am pretty sure you have to mix w/w but again call) worked quite well.  Most likely, you'll want the 5610 series.  Regardless, note that all oils suffer dispersion and wavelength and temperature differences from that specified will cause them to have different  effective RIs when, for example, used at 37 deg C.

Cheers,

Jason

On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 10:25 PM, Craig Brideau <[hidden email]> wrote:
Thanks for the tip!  I was looking on the Cargille website at the oil specs, and most of them are 1.52XX (including A and B) except for type FF, which is 1.48.  So theoretically you could mix the FF with A or B and get somewhere between 1.52 and 1.48 depending on the ratios.  Here's the table with the info:
http://www.cargille.com/immeroilspecs.shtml

Craig



On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Barbara Foster <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi, Craig

While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the commonly used sodium D line. 

However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can, indeed, achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been used by chemical microscopists.  

For those of you interested in following through on this line of study, Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their website www.cargille.com).

Hope this was helpful,
Barbara Foster, President

Microscopy/Microscopy Education
7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
McKinney TX 75070
P: (972)924-5310
Skype: fostermme
W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com

NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED www.MicroscopyEducation.com! And don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through Dec 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.





At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Hi all,
Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.
I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
I'm working at 488nm for your information
Thanks for your help
Neil Kad
University of Essex



Craig Brideau Craig Brideau
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
That's a good point.  They say the A and B will mix well, but they have almost identical refractive index values.  The FF might not blend well with the A or B.  Oil and Oil don't mix? @:-)

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 3:58 PM, Jason Swedlow <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi Craig-

I'm pretty sure you want to be careful mixing the different oils-- they are of different chemistry and might produce unpredictable results.  Maybe call them and ask.  However, we always used the Cargille Laser Liquids (http://www.cargille.com/laserliq.shtml) and the mixing trick there (I am pretty sure you have to mix w/w but again call) worked quite well.  Most likely, you'll want the 5610 series.  Regardless, note that all oils suffer dispersion and wavelength and temperature differences from that specified will cause them to have different  effective RIs when, for example, used at 37 deg C.

Cheers,

Jason


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 10:25 PM, Craig Brideau <[hidden email]> wrote:
Thanks for the tip!  I was looking on the Cargille website at the oil specs, and most of them are 1.52XX (including A and B) except for type FF, which is 1.48.  So theoretically you could mix the FF with A or B and get somewhere between 1.52 and 1.48 depending on the ratios.  Here's the table with the info:
http://www.cargille.com/immeroilspecs.shtml

Craig



On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Barbara Foster <[hidden email]> wrote:
Hi, Craig

While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the commonly used sodium D line. 

However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can, indeed, achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been used by chemical microscopists.  

For those of you interested in following through on this line of study, Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their website www.cargille.com).

Hope this was helpful,
Barbara Foster, President

Microscopy/Microscopy Education
7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
McKinney TX 75070
P: (972)924-5310
Skype: fostermme
W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com

NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED www.MicroscopyEducation.com! And don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through Dec 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.





At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.  I haven't tried this myself yet though.

Craig


On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <[hidden email]> wrote:
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
Hi all,
Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
background.
I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
enormous change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
immersion oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
I'm working at 488nm for your information
Thanks for your help
Neil Kad
University of Essex




S. Brunet S. Brunet
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

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Hi!

I use the Zeiss Immersol 518F, but if you want Cargille, what about the DF
version?  No mixing involved.  Remember to clean your objective before changing
oil!

Bye!
Sophie
____________________________________________________
Sophie M. K. Brunet, Ph. D.
Research Officer
Optical Spectroscopy, Laser Systems and Applications
Chemistry 112 sessional lecturer
[hidden email]
306-966-1719 (office)   306-966-1702 (fax)
____________________________________________________
Saskatchewan Structural Sciences Centre
University of Saskatchewan
Thorvaldson Bldg.
110 Science Place
Saskatoon, Sk   S7N 5C9
____________________________________________________


Quoting Craig Brideau <[hidden email]>:

> Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
>
> That's a good point.  They say the A and B will mix well, but they have
> almost identical refractive index values.  The FF might not blend well with
> the A or B.  Oil and Oil don't mix? @:-)
>
> Craig
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 3:58 PM, Jason Swedlow
> <[hidden email]>wrote:
>
> > Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> > http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
> > Hi Craig-
> >
> > I'm pretty sure you want to be careful mixing the different oils-- they are
> > of different chemistry and might produce unpredictable results.  Maybe call
> > them and ask.  However, we always used the Cargille Laser Liquids (
> > http://www.cargille.com/laserliq.shtml) and the mixing trick there (I am
> > pretty sure you have to mix w/w but again call) worked quite well.  Most
> > likely, you'll want the 5610 series.  Regardless, note that all oils suffer
> > dispersion and wavelength and temperature differences from that specified
> > will cause them to have different  effective RIs when, for example, used at
> > 37 deg C.
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> > Jason
> >
> >
> > On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 10:25 PM, Craig Brideau
> <[hidden email]>wrote:
> >
> >> Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> >> http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
> >> Thanks for the tip!  I was looking on the Cargille website at the oil
> >> specs, and most of them are 1.52XX (including A and B) except for type FF,
> >> which is 1.48.  So theoretically you could mix the FF with A or B and get
> >> somewhere between 1.52 and 1.48 depending on the ratios.  Here's the table
> >> with the info:
> >> http://www.cargille.com/immeroilspecs.shtml
> >>
> >> Craig
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 2:36 PM, Barbara Foster <[hidden email]> wrote:
> >>
> >>> Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> >>> http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
> >>> Hi, Craig
> >>>
> >>> While mixing Type A and B will give you intermediatary thicknesses, it
> >>> will have little change on RI:  Type A and B are both 1.5150 for the
> >>> commonly used sodium D line.
> >>>
> >>> However, your concept is correct.  Cargille has several sets of test and
> >>> calibration liquids, and, by mixing them proportionately, you can,
> indeed,
> >>> achieve the intermediate refractive indices.  This practice has long been
> >>> used by chemical microscopists.
> >>>
> >>> For those of you interested in following through on this line of study,
> >>> Cargille used to have a great little reference book by Dr. R. D. Allen on
> >>> refractometry.  They also now have some basic but good info on their
> website
> >>> www.cargille.com). <http://www.cargille.com%29.%C2%A0/>
> >>>
> >>> Hope this was helpful,
> >>> *Barbara Foster, President
> >>>
> >>> Microscopy/Microscopy Education
> >>> *7101 Royal Glen Trail, Suite A
> >>> McKinney TX 75070
> >>> P: (972)924-5310
> >>> Skype: fostermme
> >>> W: www.MicroscopyEducation.com
> >>>
> >>>  <http://www.microscopyeducation.com/>*NEWS! Visit the NEW and IMPROVED
> >>> www.MicroscopyEducation.com <http://www.microscopyeducation.com/>! And
> >>> don't forget:  MME is now scheduling customized, on-site courses through
> Dec
> >>> 2008.  Call me for a free assessment and quote.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> *At 01:18 PM 9/3/2008, you wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> >>> http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
> >>> I'm just using Cargille type A and B.  'A' for upright scopes and 'B' for
> >>> inverted (because it's thicker).  Apparently you can actually mix some of
> >>> these oils together to get intermediate thickness and index values, so it
> >>> may be possible to mix your own for an intermediate viscosity and index.
> I
> >>> haven't tried this myself yet though.
> >>>
> >>> Craig
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> On Wed, Sep 3, 2008 at 9:56 AM, SUBSCRIBE CONFOCAL Neil M. Kad <
> >>> [hidden email]> wrote: Search the CONFOCAL archive at
> >>> http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
> >>> Hi all,
> >>> Just want to know what immersion oils people are using to ensure minimal
> >>> background.
> >>> I recently tried the Cargille FF, but because I'm using TIRF I saw an
> enormous
> >>> change in the image due to the RI difference compared to regular
> immersion
> >>> oils. So I'd like to stick to the usual 1.52 ish.
> >>> I'm working at 488nm for your information
> >>> Thanks for your help
> >>> Neil Kad University of Essex
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >
> >
>
Neil Kad Neil Kad
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

In reply to this post by Neil Kad
Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal

Thanks for your help. I've got some DF from Cargille on order now. If anyone
else has suggestions for good low fluorescence oil, I'm still interested.

Neil
Beat Ludin Beat Ludin
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at
http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal

Keep in mind that immersion oils do not only differ in refractive
index but also in dispersive index. That means the same oil may work
perfectly with the microscopes of one manufacturer and produce very
noticeable chromatic aberrations with those from another.

Beat

At 12:08 05-09-2008, you wrote:
>Search the CONFOCAL archive at
>http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?S1=confocal
>
>Thanks for your help. I've got some DF from Cargille on order now. If anyone
>else has suggestions for good low fluorescence oil, I'm still interested.
>
>Neil
Martin Wessendorf-2 Martin Wessendorf-2
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Re: Gold Standard immersion oil

Search the CONFOCAL archive at
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Dear Beat--

Beat Ludin wrote:

> Keep in mind that immersion oils do not only differ in refractive index
> but also in dispersive index. That means the same oil may work perfectly
> with the microscopes of one manufacturer and produce very noticeable
> chromatic aberrations with those from another.

--I would like to try to illustrate this to a class.  Do you know of any
good examples of combinations that "don't work"?

Thanks!

Martin Wessendorf
--
Martin Wessendorf, Ph.D.                   office: (612) 626-0145
Assoc Prof, Dept Neuroscience                 lab: (612) 624-2991
University of Minnesota             Preferred FAX: (612) 624-8118
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