Quantitative estimation of optical properties in bilayer media within the subdiffusive regime using a tilted fiber-optic probe in diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, part 1: a theoretical framework for designing probe geometry.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_4078C5C3F911
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Quantitative estimation of optical properties in bilayer media within the subdiffusive regime using a tilted fiber-optic probe in diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, part 1: a theoretical framework for designing probe geometry.
Journal
Journal of biomedical optics
ISSN
1560-2281 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1083-3668
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
29
Number
10
Pages
105001
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
As biological tissues are highly heterogeneous, there is a great interest in developing non-invasive optical approaches capable of characterizing them in a very localized manner. Obtaining accurate absolute values of the local optical properties from the measured reflectance requires finding a probe geometry, which allows us to solve this inverse problem robustly and reliably despite neglecting the higher-order moments of the scattering phase function.
Our goal is to develop a theoretical framework for designing tilted-fiber diffuse reflectance probes that allow quantitative estimation of the optical properties corresponding to limited tissue volume (typically a few cubic millimeters).
Relationships among probe geometry, sampled tissue volume, and robustness of the inverse solver to calculate optical properties from reflectance are studied using Monte Carlo simulations.
The analysis of the number of scattering events of the collected photons leads to the establishment of relationships among the probe geometry, the sampled tissue volume, and the validity of a subdiffusive regime for the reflectance.
A methodology is proposed for the design of new compact probes with tilted fiber geometry that can quantitatively estimate the values of the optical coefficients in a localized manner within living biological tissues by recording diffuse reflectance spectra.
Our goal is to develop a theoretical framework for designing tilted-fiber diffuse reflectance probes that allow quantitative estimation of the optical properties corresponding to limited tissue volume (typically a few cubic millimeters).
Relationships among probe geometry, sampled tissue volume, and robustness of the inverse solver to calculate optical properties from reflectance are studied using Monte Carlo simulations.
The analysis of the number of scattering events of the collected photons leads to the establishment of relationships among the probe geometry, the sampled tissue volume, and the validity of a subdiffusive regime for the reflectance.
A methodology is proposed for the design of new compact probes with tilted fiber geometry that can quantitatively estimate the values of the optical coefficients in a localized manner within living biological tissues by recording diffuse reflectance spectra.
Keywords
Monte Carlo Method, Fiber Optic Technology/instrumentation, Scattering, Radiation, Spectrum Analysis/methods, Spectrum Analysis/instrumentation, Equipment Design, Computer Simulation, Optical Fibers, Diffusion, diffuse reflectance, effective phase function, intrinsic optical properties, subdiffusive
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
24/10/2024 22:26
Last modification date
02/11/2024 7:10