Determination of Nanoparticle and Microdroplet Parameters in Levitating Microdroplets of Suspension by Speckle Image Analysis Using Convolutional Neural Networks
Yaroslav Shopa, Kwasi Nyandey, Daniel Jakubczyk

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that convolutional neural networks can analyze speckle images from levitating microdroplets to accurately determine parameters like droplet size and nanoparticle concentration, enabling advanced optical diagnostics.
Contribution
The paper introduces a data-driven method using CNNs to classify multiple parameters of levitating microdroplets from speckle images, advancing optical diagnostic techniques.
Findings
Droplet diameter was identified with better than 6% accuracy.
Nanoparticle concentration discrimination depended on class separation.
Simultaneous classification of three parameters into 27 classes was successful.
Abstract
The optical response of a suspension microdroplet is governed not only by the properties of the dispersed phase, but also by the finite size and optical structure of the droplet itself. As a result, the interpretation of scattered-light patterns from such systems constitutes a non-trivial inverse problem. In this work, we examine whether laser speckle images recorded from single levitating microdroplets of suspension can be used for data-driven recognition of selected droplet and suspension parameters. Experiments were performed on slowly evaporating microdroplets of monodisperse TiO nanoparticle suspensions in diethylene glycol confined in a linear electrodynamic quadrupole trap. Speckle images were analyzed with a convolutional neural network trained to classify droplet diameter, nanoparticle concentration, and nanoparticle diameter, first in separate tasks and then in combined…
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