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Principles and Applications of Vibrational Spectroscopic Imaging in Plant Science: A Review

Frontiers in Plant Science 2020 81 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Justyna Grabska, Krzysztof B. Beć, Krzysztof B. Beć, Krzysztof B. Beć, Justyna Grabska, Krzysztof B. Beć, Justyna Grabska, Justyna Grabska, Christian W. Huck Christian W. Huck Günther K. Bonn, Michael Popp, Michael Popp, Christian W. Huck Christian W. Huck Christian W. Huck Christian W. Huck Krzysztof B. Beć, Christian W. Huck Justyna Grabska, Christian W. Huck Christian W. Huck

Summary

This review covers the principles and applications of vibrational spectroscopic imaging techniques including infrared and Raman spectroscopy in plant science, highlighting their capacity to provide spatially distributed chemical information from organ to sub-cellular scales without destructive sampling. The authors survey applications across plant biochemistry, structural analysis, and secondary metabolite localization, demonstrating the utility of these methods for both basic and applied botanical research.

Detailed knowledge about plant chemical constituents and their distributions from organ level to sub-cellular level is of critical interest to basic and applied sciences. Spectral imaging techniques offer unparalleled advantages in that regard. The core advantage of these technologies is that they acquire spatially distributed semi-quantitative information of high specificity towards chemical constituents of plants. This forms invaluable asset in the studies on plant biochemical and structural features. In certain applications, non-invasive analysis is possible. The information harvested through spectral imaging can be used for exploration of plant biochemistry, physiology, metabolism, classification, and phenotyping among others, with significant gains for basic and applied research. This article aims to present a general perspective about vibrational spectral imaging/micro-spectroscopy in the context of plant research. Within the scope of this review are infrared (IR), near-infrared (NIR) and Raman imaging techniques. To better expose the potential and limitations of these techniques, fluorescence imaging is briefly overviewed as a method relatively less flexible but particularly powerful for the investigation of photosynthesis. Included is a brief introduction to the physical, instrumental, and data-analytical background essential for the applications of imaging techniques. The applications are discussed on the basis of recent literature.

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