Low-coherence enhanced backscattering (LEBS) for bioimaging.

Coherent backscattering of light (CBS) is a well-established phenomenon in optics. Conventionally, CBS method is used in fields like astronomy and studies of crystalline structures. CBS phenomenon is observable experimentally as a distinct sharp peak superimposed on a diffused background in the back...

全面介紹

Saved in:
書目詳細資料
主要作者: Lim, Noreen Yixuan.
其他作者: Lee Kijoon
格式: Final Year Project
語言:English
出版: 2012
主題:
在線閱讀:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50210
標簽: 添加標簽
沒有標簽, 成為第一個標記此記錄!
實物特徵
總結:Coherent backscattering of light (CBS) is a well-established phenomenon in optics. Conventionally, CBS method is used in fields like astronomy and studies of crystalline structures. CBS phenomenon is observable experimentally as a distinct sharp peak superimposed on a diffused background in the backscattering direction. One key obstacle of using CBS method to probe biological tissues is its extremely narrow cone width. It was observed that replacing the highly coherent laser source in CBS with a broadband light source offers many critical improvements: cone width broadening, depth selective probing, spectroscopic analysis and speckle-reduction. This is due to the spatially finite coherence property of the source illumination. Such a setup is termed low-coherence enhanced backscattering (LEBS). These improvements not only alleviate the limitations of observing CBS, they may also uncover more optical characteristics of the probed tissues. This study focuses on observing the change of LEBS cone width under varying spatial coherent length, Lsc. We first established that increasing cone width at full width half maximum corresponds to increasing transport mean free path length, l* in CBS. A comparison showed that LEBS data displayed a similar trend. Interestingly, we observed that probing of double-layered samples showed the depth-selective nature of LEBS. When data collected is plotted as function of Lsc, the curves reflected the transition of penetration depth from the more highly scattering bottom layer to the less-scattering top layer. These results indicated the potential of using LEBS cone width as a means of tissue diagnostics and can prove useful in detection of field carcinogenesis.