Open Access
18 September 2019 Single-pixel camera photoacoustic tomography
Nam Huynh, Felix Lucka, Edward Z. Zhang, Marta M. Betcke, Simon R. Arridge, Paul C. Beard, Benjamin T. Cox
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Since it was first demonstrated more than a decade ago, the single-pixel camera concept has been used in numerous applications in which it is necessary or advantageous to reduce the channel count, cost, or data volume. Here, three-dimensional (3-D), compressed-sensing photoacoustic tomography (PAT) is demonstrated experimentally using a single-pixel camera. A large area collimated laser beam is reflected from a planar Fabry–Pérot ultrasound sensor onto a digital micromirror device, which patterns the light using a scrambled Hadamard basis before it is collected into a single photodetector. In this way, inner products of the Hadamard patterns and the distribution of thickness changes of the FP sensor—induced by the photoacoustic waves—are recorded. The initial distribution of acoustic pressure giving rise to those photoacoustic waves is recovered directly from the measured signals using an accelerated proximal gradient-type algorithm to solve a model-based minimization with total variation regularization. Using this approach, it is shown that 3-D PAT of imaging phantoms can be obtained with compression rates as low as 10%. Compressed sensing approaches to photoacoustic imaging, such as this, have the potential to reduce the data acquisition time as well as the volume of data it is necessary to acquire, both of which are becoming increasingly important in the drive for faster imaging systems giving higher resolution images with larger fields of view.

CC BY: © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original publication, including its DOI.
Nam Huynh, Felix Lucka, Edward Z. Zhang, Marta M. Betcke, Simon R. Arridge, Paul C. Beard, and Benjamin T. Cox "Single-pixel camera photoacoustic tomography," Journal of Biomedical Optics 24(12), 121907 (18 September 2019). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.JBO.24.12.121907
Received: 12 June 2019; Accepted: 19 August 2019; Published: 18 September 2019
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CITATIONS
Cited by 19 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Cameras

Acoustics

Digital micromirror devices

Photoacoustic tomography

Acquisition tracking and pointing

Photoacoustic spectroscopy

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