OPTICSCVAPP-PHAug 5, 2023

Multispectral Quantitative Phase Imaging Using a Diffractive Optical Network

arXiv:2308.02952v128 citationsh-index: 38
Originality Incremental advance
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This provides a compact, power-efficient solution for high-throughput quantitative phase microscopy and spectroscopy, with potential applications in biology and materials science, though it appears incremental as an extension of existing diffractive processor methods.

The authors tackled multispectral quantitative phase imaging (QPI) by designing a diffractive optical network that all-optically performs snapshot imaging across multiple spectral bands, demonstrating through simulations uniform performance at 9 and 16 wavelengths in the visible spectrum.

As a label-free imaging technique, quantitative phase imaging (QPI) provides optical path length information of transparent specimens for various applications in biology, materials science, and engineering. Multispectral QPI measures quantitative phase information across multiple spectral bands, permitting the examination of wavelength-specific phase and dispersion characteristics of samples. Here, we present the design of a diffractive processor that can all-optically perform multispectral quantitative phase imaging of transparent phase-only objects in a snapshot. Our design utilizes spatially engineered diffractive layers, optimized through deep learning, to encode the phase profile of the input object at a predetermined set of wavelengths into spatial intensity variations at the output plane, allowing multispectral QPI using a monochrome focal plane array. Through numerical simulations, we demonstrate diffractive multispectral processors to simultaneously perform quantitative phase imaging at 9 and 16 target spectral bands in the visible spectrum. These diffractive multispectral processors maintain uniform performance across all the wavelength channels, revealing a decent QPI performance at each target wavelength. The generalization of these diffractive processor designs is validated through numerical tests on unseen objects, including thin Pap smear images. Due to its all-optical processing capability using passive dielectric diffractive materials, this diffractive multispectral QPI processor offers a compact and power-efficient solution for high-throughput quantitative phase microscopy and spectroscopy. This framework can operate at different parts of the electromagnetic spectrum and be used for a wide range of phase imaging and sensing applications.

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