Silva, Ana G.Beule, PieterMarques, Dylan Mickael2017-10-252018-10-012017-102017-10http://hdl.handle.net/10362/24549In this work it is presented a solution to Maxwell’s equations for core-shell nanoparticle scattering near an isotropic substrate covered with an anisotropic thin film, based on an extension of the Bobbert-Vlieger (BV) solution for particle scattering near a substrate, delivering an exact solution in the near-field as well as far-field. It is applied successfully the developed scattering model to the calculation of light scattering on an optical model representing a lipid vesicle near a lipid bilayer, whereby the lipids are characterized through a uniaxial optical model. Hereby, it is paved the path for understanding quantitatively how light scatters during a cellular exo- or endocytosis event during microscopic observation taking into account lipid induced anisotropy. Through the application of ellipsometry angles it is effectively demonstrated that realistically small optical anisotropy values significantly alter far-field optical scattering in respect to an equivalent optical model for cellular endocytosis consisting of isotropic components only. It is then calculated the impact of lipid-induced optical anisotropy on the experimental observation of exo- or endocytic microscopic imaging with e.g. Differential Interference Contrast (DIC) microscopy. Furthermore, it is integrated this extended BV scattering solution into a rigorous model of DIC image formation which allows for characterizing DIC, through simulation, as a tool for imaging of exo- or endocytosis events. It is also compared theoretical predictions with experimental high Numerical Aperture (NA) dic imaging of dielectric oxide nanoparticles with organic shell.engOptical properties of nanostructuresOptical anisotropyNanomedicineEllipsometry and differential interference contrast microscopic imaging of cellular exoand endocytosis: modelling and experimentsmaster thesis