Paper
1 July 2004 Angular domain imaging of phantom objects within highly scattering mediums
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Abstract
Most optical tomography work within highly scattering media has employed coherence domain and time domain methodologies, both detecting the shortest path photons over the dominant randomly scattered background. Angular domain imaging instead uses micromachined collimators to observe only those photons within a small angle of the aligned laser light source, which simulations show are the shortest path photons, while rejecting heavily scattered light. These angular filters consist of micromachined silicon collimator channels 51 micron wide by 10 mm or 20 mm long on 102 micron spacing giving acceptance angles of 0.29 to 0.15 degrees on a CCD detector. Phantom test objects were observed in mediums ranging from 1 to 5 cm thick at scattered to ballistic ratios of 500,000:1 to 10,000,000:1 depending on the illumination pattern. Object detection was retained at the same scattering levels for either 1 cm or 5cm thick mediums, demonstrating little dependence on medium thickness. Detection was also independent of the object size: phantoms ranging from thin structures of 100 micron wide lines and spaces to 4 mm spheres were detected at approximately the same scattering ratios. Minimum size resolution depends on CCD pixel size, not the collimator characteristics. Furthermore, detection was a function of the scattering ratio produced after the phantom's position, not of the whole medium’s scattering ratio. This means objects nearer the detector are much more observable. Longer collimators significantly increase the scattered light rejection. Monte-Carlo simulations with angular tracking demonstrate the object size independence and are undertaken to verify the other behaviors.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nick Pfeiffer, Bob Wai, and Glenn H. Chapman "Angular domain imaging of phantom objects within highly scattering mediums", Proc. SPIE 5319, Laser Interaction with Tissue and Cells XV, (1 July 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.529920
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Scattering

Light scattering

Laser scattering

Photons

Charge-coupled devices

Sensors

Collimators

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