The present invention relates to an optical adaptor, and more particularly relates to an optical adaptor suitable for use in combination with an optical imaging system so as to correct the field curvature of the imaging system when viewing a curved object so as to produce a substantially flat image of the curved object.
The optical adaptor of the present invention has been developed for use with an optical viewing system of the type generally used for viewing and analysing cell cultures, and the invention is therefore described herein with specific reference to such systems. However, it should be appreciated that the invention may find use in other applications where it is desired to adjust the field curvature of a base imaging system in a manner effective to allow the imaging system to produce a focussed image of a curved object in a substantially flat image plane.
Sample viewing devices have been proposed previously for use in viewing and analysing cell cultures. Modern techniques of cell line development, cellular research and drug discovery typically involve the need to view and analyse a very large number of different cell cultures. The use of microplates (or well-plates as they are sometimes known) has therefore now become common. A microplate is typically moulded from plastics material and comprises a plurality of individual wells arranged in an array. Different culture samples may thus be inserted in each well, and the microplate inserted into a viewing/analysing machine configured to view the samples located in the individual wells and analyse the results. Such analysis can typically involve the use of specialist software to measure confluence and cell growth, and typically includes software specially configured to count cell colonies.
As will be appreciated, it is important that such sample viewing devices provide high quality images of the various samples located in a microplate. The sample viewing devices thus comprise precise optical imaging systems which are configured to produce focussed images of the samples lying in each well of the microplate, the images typically being formed on a flat sensor such as a CCD sensor or a CMOS sensor. This is relatively easy to achieve when the microplates being viewed have flat-bottomed wells, because the optical imaging system can easily be configured to produce flat images of substantially flat objects (effectively the flat bottoms of each well). However, problems arise when microplates having wells with curved (and typically outwardly convex) bottoms are used, because the imaging system is then required to image a curved object, resulting in a curved image formation plane, thereby preventing the system from producing a well focussed image on the flat sensor. There is therefore a need for some convenient way of adjusting the field curvature of such imaging systems.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an optical adaptor suitable for use in combination with an optical imaging system.
It is another object of the present invention to provide an improved sample viewing device.
Accordingly, a first aspect of the present invention provides an optical adaptor for use in combination with an optical imaging system, the adaptor being configured, when positioned between an object and the imaging system, to correct the field curvature of the imaging system so as to produce a substantially flat image of a curved object, the adaptor comprising: a primary lens unit of positive power which in use is towards the object, and a secondary lens unit of negative power which in use is towards the imaging system, the primary lens unit having an overcorrect Petzval Sum.
Preferably, said primary lens unit comprises a primary meniscus lens.
The primary meniscus lens may be configured such that its concave surface faces said object in use and has a smaller radius of curvature than its convex surface.
Preferably, the optical adaptor is configured such that 2≦RV/RC≦6, where RV denotes the radius of curvature of the convex surface of the primary meniscus lens, and RC denotes the radius of curvature of the concave surface of the primary meniscus lens. Most preferably, RV/RC is approximately equal to 3.
The optical adaptor is preferably configured such that 3≦T/RC≦7, where T denotes the thickness of said primary meniscus lens and RC denotes the radius of curvature of the concave surface of the primary meniscus lens. Most preferably, T/RC is approximately equal to 4.5.
Conveniently, the optical adaptor is configured for use in imaging an object having a curved surface which is substantially convex towards the adaptor, wherein RO≦RV≦2.5 RO, where RO denotes the radius of curvature of said convex object surface, and RV denotes the radius of curvature of the convex surface of the primary meniscus lens.
The primary lens unit may comprise a compound lens.
The primary lens unit may comprise a doublet lens.
The secondary lens unit preferably comprises a secondary meniscus lens.
The secondary meniscus lens is preferably configured such that its concave surface faces said primary lens unit and has a smaller radius of curvature than its convex surface.
The secondary lens unit may comprise a compound lens.
The secondary lens unit may comprise a doublet lens.
Preferably, the thickness of said primary lens unit is substantially greater than the thickness of said secondary lens unit. Particular embodiments are proposed in which the thickness of said secondary lens unit is approximately 40% of the thickness of said primary lens unit.
The optical adaptor of the present invention may be provided in combination with said optical imaging system. Preferably, said optical imaging system is configured to have an f-number of at least 4.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a sample viewing device comprising an optical adaptor of the type defined above, and optical imaging system, the viewing device further comprising means to support a substantially transparent sample carrier (such as a microplate) in a viewing position in which at least part of the sample carrier may be imaged by said imaging system, and wherein said optical adaptor is selectively positionable in the optical path between said sample carrier and the imaging system. The optical adaptor can thus be removed from the optical path between the sample carrier and the imaging system when the sample carrier takes the form of a microplate with flat-bottomed wells, so that the imaging system can image samples within the individual wells in a conventional manner. However, by inserting the optical adaptor of the present invention in the optical path between the sample carrier and the imaging system, the viewer can be re-configured to provide clearly focussed images of samples within the individual wells of a curved-well microplate.
So that the invention may be more readily understood, and so that further features thereof may be appreciated, embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Referring in particular to
The microplate 5 is of generally conventional form and comprises a plurality of individual wells 6 arranged in a close-packed array, each well being presented to receive a respective sample for analysis by the device.
So, turning now to consider
As illustrated in
As indicated above, the optical imaging system 10 is illustrated in
As illustrated in
Turning now to consider
As will be explained below, the optical adapter 19 of the present invention serves to modify the field curvature of the base imaging system 10 so that the combination of the optical adapter 19 and the base imaging system 10 will produce a substantially flat focused image on the image sensor 13, rather than a curved image as illustrated in
The primary lens unit 20 takes the form of a meniscus lens having very significant thickness T as measured along the optical axis 14. As will be seen, the concave surface 22 of the meniscus lens 20 is arranged in use to face the object (i.e. the base 8 of the well being viewed). The meniscus lens 20 is furthermore configured such that the concave surface 22 has a more steeply curved surface than the oppositely directed convex surface 23 of the lens. In the preferred arrangement, this relationship between the two surfaces 22, 23 of the lens 20 can be expressed as 2.0≦RV/RC≦6.0, where RV denotes the radius of curvature of the convex surface 23, and RC denotes the radius of curvature of the concave surface 22. Most preferably, RV/RC is approximately equal to 3.0.
As will be appreciated, conventional meniscus lenses having a more steeply curved concaves surface than convex surfaces are considered to be negative lenses, in the sense that they are diverging. However, the primary meniscus lens 20 of the adaptor 19 is specifically configured, on account of its very significant thickness T, to be converging, and hence has positive power. This converging nature of the lens 20 is clearly illustrated in
The significant thickness T of the primary meniscus lens 20, as expressed above, allows the lens to have positive (converging) power, whilst simultaneously having the field curvature properties of a negative lens. The lens 20 thus has a strong component of positive Petzval sum, and so has an overcorrect Petzval sum.
It will this be seen that the primary meniscus lens 20 serves to converge the rays passing through it from the curved object 8.
The secondary lens unit 21 serves to correct the power of the primary lens 20 in order for the optical adaptor to interface accurately with the first lens 11 of the base imaging system 10. As illustrated in
In contrast to the primary lens 20, the secondary meniscus lens 21 has a more conventional configuration, and hence is negative (diverging), as characterised by the fact that its concave surface 24 is more steeply curved than its convex surface 25. The secondary lens 21 serves to adjust the overall power of the adaptor 19 so that it cooperates appropriately with the first lens 11 of the base imaging system.
Whilst the thickness t of the secondary lens 21, as measured along the optical axis 14 is not as significant to the operation of the adaptor as the thickness T of the primary lens 20, it has been found that the best results are achieved when the thickness t of the secondary lens is approximately 40% of the thickness T of the primary lens.
The primary meniscus lens 20 is preferably made from either crown glass, lanthanum crown glass, or a lanthanum flint glass, whilst the secondary meniscus lens 21 is preferably made from a more dispersive material such as flint glass, thereby configuring the secondary meniscus lens such that it corrects the longitudinal and lateral colour aberrations of the primary meniscus lens 20.
The magnitude of the various parameters given above are intended to describe the configuration of an optical adaptor suitable for use with a base imaging system having an effective f-number of 4 or higher (i.e. “slower”), whilst the base system itself has principal rays less than 10 degrees from telecentric. Most preferably, the principal rays of the base system converge by 1.5 degrees from the full field of the object 8 towards the base imaging system 10, and the optical adaptor of the preferred embodiment is effective to modify the field curvature of the overall system sufficiently to produce a substantially flat image of the curved object 8.
As will be understood by those of skill in the art, the optical adaptor of the present invention and the base imaging system are optimised for effective use with one another. In particular, the exact curvatures and glass-types of the primary meniscus lens 20 and the secondary meniscus lens 21 will be selected to provide a balanced correction of the remaining third- and higher-order aberrations in conjunction with the base imaging system 10.
It should be appreciated that although the invention has been described above with specific reference to an embodiment in which the primary and secondary lens units 20, 21 comprise single meniscus lenses, in variants of the invention it is envisaged that either or both of the lenses could be replaced by compound lenses, such as doublet lenses. It is envisaged that in the event that a doublet lens is used, it could take the form of a cemented doublet comprising elements of two different glass types. Lenses of this type could be used to adjust the optical aperture (i.e. the f-number) of the base system, or extend its field of view.
An example of a specific optical adaptor in accordance with the present invention and a base optical system is illustrated in
Surface=the lens surfaces A to N indicated in
R=the radii of curvature of respective lens surfaces
T=the axial thickness of the following lens material or air
Nd=the refractive index of the lens material referenced to a wavelength of 587.6 nm
Vd=the Abbe number of the lens material referenced to a wavelength of 587.6 nm
As will be appreciated, therefore, the object being viewed is located against the inside surface (i.e surface A) of a curved well of a microplate sample holder. The base optical system is a 1:1 relay and represented by surfaces G to M in Table 1 and
Furthermore, in the specific example defined, Magnification=−0.789, FNo at image=6.25, and Object size=±3 mm
When used in this specification and claims, the terms “comprises” and “comprising” and variations thereof mean that the specified features, steps or integers are included. The terms are not to be interpreted to exclude the presence of other features, steps or components.
The features disclosed in the foregoing description, or in the following claims, or in the accompanying drawings, expressed in their specific forms or in terms of a means for performing the disclosed function, or a method or process for obtaining the disclosed results, as appropriate, may, separately, or in any combination of such features, be utilised for realising the invention in diverse forms thereof.
While the invention has been described in conjunction with the exemplary embodiments described above, many equivalent modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art when given this disclosure. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention set forth above are considered to be illustrative and not limiting. Various changes to the described embodiments may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0902571.9 | Feb 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2010/000245 | 2/10/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/12/2011 |