Particle-tracking microrheology probes the rheology of soft materials by accurately tracking an ensemble of embedded colloidal tracer particles. One-particle analysis, which focuses on the trajectory of individual tracers is ideal for homogeneous materials that do not interact with the particles. By contrast, the characterization of heterogeneous, micro-structured materials or those where particles interact directly with the medium requires a two-particle analysis that characterizes correlations between the trajectories of distinct particle pairs. Here, we propose an optical-flow image analysis as an alternative to the tracking-based algorithms to extract one and two-particle microrheology information from video microscopy images acquired using diverse imaging contrast modalities. This technique, termed optical-flow microrheology (OFM), represents a high-throughput, operator-free approach for the characterization of a broad range of soft materials, making microrheology accessible to a wider scientific community.
One- and two-particle microrheology of soft materials based on optical-flow image analysis / M. Brizioli, M.A. Escobedo-Sanchez, P.M. Mccall, Y. Roichman, V. Trappe, M.L. Gardel, S.U. Egelhaaf, F. Giavazzi, R. Cerbino. - In: SOFT MATTER. - ISSN 1744-6848. - (2025), pp. 1-9. [Epub ahead of print] [10.1039/d4sm01390e]
One- and two-particle microrheology of soft materials based on optical-flow image analysis
M. BrizioliPrimo
;F. Giavazzi
Penultimo
;R. Cerbino
Ultimo
2025
Abstract
Particle-tracking microrheology probes the rheology of soft materials by accurately tracking an ensemble of embedded colloidal tracer particles. One-particle analysis, which focuses on the trajectory of individual tracers is ideal for homogeneous materials that do not interact with the particles. By contrast, the characterization of heterogeneous, micro-structured materials or those where particles interact directly with the medium requires a two-particle analysis that characterizes correlations between the trajectories of distinct particle pairs. Here, we propose an optical-flow image analysis as an alternative to the tracking-based algorithms to extract one and two-particle microrheology information from video microscopy images acquired using diverse imaging contrast modalities. This technique, termed optical-flow microrheology (OFM), represents a high-throughput, operator-free approach for the characterization of a broad range of soft materials, making microrheology accessible to a wider scientific community.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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