In this thesis a new approach for single molecule detection and analysis is explored. This approach is based on the combination of two well established methods, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM). In contrast to most existing fluorescence spectroscopy techniques, the subject of primary interest in FCS is not the fluorescence intensity itself but the random intensity fluctuation around the mean value. Intensity fluctuations are induced by thermal noise in a minute observation volume, which is in classical FCS the confocal volume of a confocal microscope. E.g. FCS is commonly utilized to investigate diffusion. In this case, diffusing fluorescent molecules entering or leaving the observation volume cause intensity fluctuations, which are analyzed by calculating the temporal autocorrelation of the observed signal. The autocorrelation is a measure for the self-similarity of a signal and contains information about the average fluctuation strength and duration. The confocal observation volume, i.e. the measurement volume that is actually seen by the detector is approximately given by the product of the optical transfer function with the fluorescence exciting intensity distribution of a focused laser beam. To achieve a high signal-to-background ratio a small observation volume is absolutely essential, first of all because the background from e.g. scattered light increases with the size of the observation volume. Second, a small volume assures for a small average number of fluorophores inside the observation volume and therefore for a high fluctuation amplitude i.e. FCS signal. This thesis proposes and discusses an alternative to confocal FCS specially conceived for measurements on surface-bound molecular systems, such as biological receptors or immobilized enzymes. In contrast to confocal FCS, fluorescence is excited within an evanescent field generated by total internal reflection (TIR) of a laser beam at the interface between a microscope coverslip and the sample. This is achieved by focusing the laser beam off-axis at the back focal plane of a high NA oil-immersion objective. The collimated beam that emerges from the objective is incident at an oblique angle at the coverslip-sample interface and totally internal reflected. In contrast to confocal FCS, the generated observation volume is completely confined to the surface and background fluorescence as well as scattered light from the bulk is efficiently suppressed. Our method, called objective-type TIR-FCS in the following, features an increased collection efficiency compared to existing techniques that combine evanescent wave excitation and FCS. Existing techniques use total internal reflection on the surface of a prism to generate an evanescent field. This leads to a configuration where the choice of objectives is limited to air or water-immersion objectives. In our system we use a high NA oil-immersion objective, specially conce
Claudio Bruschini, Edoardo Charbon, Arin Can Ülkü, Yichen Feng