Continuous wave laser diodes enable fast optoacoustic imaging

Autor: Antonios Stylogiannis, George D. Sergiadis, Ludwig Prade, Juan Aguirre, Vasilis Ntziachristos, Andreas Buehler
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2018
Předmět:
VIS
visible

lcsh:QC221-246
Photoacoustic
02 engineering and technology
01 natural sciences
Current drivers
law.invention
law
lcsh:QC350-467
TTL
transistor-transistor-logic

MIP
maximum intensity projection

OPO
optical parametric oscillator

SNR
signal-to-noise ratio

021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Atomic and Molecular Physics
and Optics

lcsh:QC1-999
ddc
Cnr
Contrast To Background Ration

Cod
Catastrophic Optical Damage

Cw
Continuous Wave

Current Drivers
Daq
Data Acquisition Card

Fwhm
Full Width At Half Maximum

Light Sources
Light-emitting Diodes
Mip
Maximum Intensity Projection

Nir
Wavelength
CNR
contrast to background ration

FWHM
full width at half maximum

Visible
Continuous wave
0210 nano-technology
COD
catastrophic optical damage

UST
ultrasound transducer

Optoacoustic imaging
lcsh:Optics. Light
Light-emitting diode
Research Article
Materials science
Light-emitting diodes
010309 optics
Optics
Near-infrared
0103 physical sciences
PLD
pulsed laser diode

Radiology
Nuclear Medicine and imaging

Light sources
NIR
near-infrared

Diode
business.industry
Near-infrared spectroscopy
CW
continuous wave

DAQ
data acquisition card

Laser
Pulse (physics)
lcsh:Acoustics. Sound
business
lcsh:Physics
Zdroj: Photoacoustics, Vol 9, Iss, Pp 31-38 (2018)
Photoacoustics 9, 31-38 (2018)
Photoacoustics
ISSN: 2213-5979
Popis: Pulsed laser diodes may offer a smaller, less expensive alternative to conventional optoacoustic laser sources; however they do not provide pulse rates faster than a few tens of kHz and emit at wavelengths only within the near-infrared region. We investigated whether continuous wave (CW) laser diodes, which are available in visible and near-infrared regions, can be good optoacoustic light sources when overdriven with a peak current >40-fold higher than the CW absolute maximum. We found that overdriven CW diodes provided ∼10 ns pulses of ∼200 nJ/pulse and repetition rates higher than 600 kHz without being damaged, outperforming many pulsed laser diodes. Using this system, we obtained images of phantoms and mouse ear and human arm in vivo, confirming their use in optoacoustic imaging and sensing. Keywords: Photoacoustic, Light sources, Light-emitting diodes, Current drivers, Visible, Near-infrared
Databáze: OpenAIRE