Optimal illumination pattern for transport-of-intensity quantitative phase microscopy
Jiaji Li, Qian Chen, Jiasong Sun, Jialin Zhang, Xiangpeng Pan, Chao, Zuo

TL;DR
This paper optimizes illumination patterns in transport-of-intensity phase microscopy to improve phase reconstruction quality, addressing low-frequency errors and blurring issues, by using a quantitative criterion and binary symmetric patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic optimization method for illumination patterns in TIE microscopy, surpassing empirical designs like annular apertures, for enhanced phase imaging performance.
Findings
Optimized binary symmetric illumination patterns improve SNR.
Enhanced spatial resolution in phase imaging.
Superior performance over traditional patterns in experiments.
Abstract
The transport-of-intensity equation (TIE) is a well-established non-interferometric phase retrieval approach, which enables quantitative phase imaging (QPI) of transparent sample simply by measuring the intensities at multiple axially displaced planes. Nevertheless, it still suffers from two fundamentally limitations. First, it is quite susceptible to low-frequency errors (such as \cloudy" artifacts), which results from the poor contrast of the phase transfer function (PTF) near the zero frequency. Second, the reconstructed phase tends to blur under spatially low-coherent illumination, especially when the defocus distance is beyond the near Fresnel region. Recent studies have shown that the shape of the illumination aperture has a significant impact on the resolution and phase reconstruction quality, and by simply replacing the conventional circular illumination aperture with an annular…
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