Fused Quartz Microscope Slides: Optical Properties, Material Science, and Applications in Quantitative Microscopy
Fused Quartz Microscope Slides: Optical Properties, Material Science, and Applications in Quantitative Microscopy Fused Quartz Microscope Slides: Optical Properties, Material Science, and Applications in Quantitative Microscopy An examination of why substrate choice matters—and when glass is not enough. 1. The Substrate Problem Every transmitted-light microscopy experiment begins with a seemingly trivial decision: which slide to use. For routine histology, soda-lime glass slides—priced at a few cents apiece—have been the default since the 19th century. Walk into any teaching lab and you will find boxes of them, their greenish tint at the edges betraying the iron oxide impurities that give soda-lime its characteristic absorption profile. For most H&E-stained sections viewed under white light, this marginal absorbance at the blue end of the spectrum is invisible. The pathologist does not notice it. The software processing the whole-slide image may. The problem begins...