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Dimensionally traceable 3D microstructures for multimodal microscope calibration
High-resolution microscopy techniques are used across research and industry to analyse biological systems, from biomolecules to subcellular organelles, multicellular models and tissues. As multimodal imaging workflows and quantitative analysis of bioimaging data become increasingly widespread, there is a growing need for materials and methods to calibrate imaging systems and evaluate the fidelity of generated image data. Here, we present three-dimensional microscopy phantoms fabricated using two-photon photolithography from transparent resins that exhibit both broadband visible autofluorescence and Raman scattering across the fingerprint and C-H stretching regions. Suitable for analysis using optical profilometry, the phantoms were dimensionally calibrated with SI traceability using a metrological confocal microscope. Immersible in air and common aqueous imaging media, the phantoms are compatible with a wide variety of optical microscopy techniques, including one and two-photon excited
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