Chapter 3 – Making Light Work in Biology 93
solution are not. In effect, this creates an optical slice of ~100 nm thickness, which increases
the contrast dramatically above background noise to permit single-molecule detection. It is
possible to adjust the angle of incidence θg to yield d values smaller than 100 nm, limited by
the numerical aperture of the objective lens (see Worked Case Example 3.1) and also larger
values, such that d → ∞ as θg → θc.
The intensity of the evanescent field is proportional to the square of the E-field amp
litude, but also depends on the polarization of the incidence E-field in the glass and has
different values for the two orthogonal polarization components in water. Incident light that
is polarized parallel (p) to the xz plane of incidence as depicted in Figure 3.5e generates
an elliptically polarized evanescent field consisting of both parallel and perpendicular (s)
polarized components. Solving Maxwell’s equations generates the full solutions for the elec
tric field vector components of the evanescent field as follows:
(3.46)
E
E
i
n
evanescent x
p
p
g
g
w
,
,
=
−
+
−
0
2
2
2
2
2
exp
cos
sin
/
δ
π
θ
θ
n
n
n
n
n
g
w
g
g
g
w
g
(
)
(
)
(
)
+
−(
)
2
4
2
2
2
/
cos
sin
/
θ
θ
(3.47)
E
E
i
n
n
y
s
s
g
evanescent
w
g
exp
cos
/
,
,
=
−
−(
)
0
2
2
2
1
δ
θ
(3.48)
E
E
i
n
n
evanescent,z
p
p
g
g
g
g
=
−
(
)
+
,0
2
4
2
2
exp
cos
sin
/
cos
si
w
δ
θ
θ
θ
n
/
2
2
θg
w
g
n
n
−(
)
where Ep,0 and Es,0 are the incident light E-field amplitudes parallel and perpendicular to the
xz plane. As these equations suggest, there are different phase changes between the incident
and evanescent E-fields parallel and perpendicular to the xz plane:
(3.49)
δ
θ
θ
p
g
g
w
g
g
n
n
n
n
=
−(
)
(
)
−
tan
sin
/
/
cos
w
1
2
2
(3.50)
δ
θ
θ
s
g
w
g
g
n
n
=
−(
)
−
tan
sin
/
cos
1
2
2
As these equations depict, the orientation of the polarization vector for s-polarized incident
light is preserved in the evanescent field as the Ey component; as the supercritical angle of
incidence gets closer to the critical angle, the Ex component in the evanescent field converges
to zero and thus the p-polarized evanescent field converges to being purely the Ez compo
nent. This is utilized in the p-TIRF technique, which uses incident pure p-polarized light
close to, but just above, the critical angle, to generate an evanescent field, which is polarized
predominantly normal to the glass coverslip–water interface. This has an important advan
tage over subcritical angle excitation in standard epifluorescence illumination, for which the
angle of incidence is zero, since in p-TIRF the polarization of the excitation field is purely par
allel to the glass–water interface and is unable to excite a fluorophore whose electric dipole
axis is normal to this interface and so can be used to infer orientation information for the