Utilising nanosecond sources in diffuse optical tomography
Meghdoot Mozumder, Jarkko Leskinen, Tanja Tarvainen

TL;DR
This study explores the feasibility of using nanosecond laser pulses in diffuse optical tomography, demonstrating that they can effectively capture imaging data despite pulse variations, enabling simpler and more robust measurement setups.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel application of nanosecond laser sources in time-domain DOT, showing their viability through simulations and experimental validation, which simplifies system design.
Findings
Nanosecond pulses carry low-frequency information suitable for DOT.
Standard digital oscilloscopes can sufficiently sample TPSF data.
Nanosecond laser pulse variations do not significantly impair image quality.
Abstract
Diffuse optical tomography (DOT) use near-infrared light for imaging optical properties of biological tissues. Time-domain DOT systems use pulsed lasers and measure time-varying temporal point spread function (TPSF), carrying information from both superficial and deep layers of imaged target. In this work, feasibility of nanosecond scale light pulses as sources for time-domain DOT is studied. Nanosecond sources enable using relatively robust measurement setups with standard analog-to-digital converter waveform digitizers, such as digital oscilloscopes. However, this type of systems have variations in source pulses and limited temporal sampling, that could limit their usage. In this work, these different aspects and possible limitations were studied with simulations and experiments. Simulations showed that information carried by time-domain data of diffuse medium is on low frequencies.…
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