Highly depth-resolved chirped pulse photothermal radar for bone diagnostics
Abstract
A novel chirped pulse photothermal (PT) radiometric radar with improved sensitivity over the conventional harmonically modulated thermal-wave radar technique and alternative pulsed laser photothermal radiometry is introduced for the diagnosis of biological samples, especially bones with tissue and skin overlayers. The constraints imposed by the laser safety (maximum permissible exposure) ceiling on pump laser energy and the strong attenuation of thermal-wave signals in tissues significantly limit the photothermally active depth in most biological specimens to a level which is normally insufficient for practical applications (a few mm below the skin surface). A theoretical approach for improvement of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), minimizing the static (dc) component of the photothermal signal and making use of the photothermal radiometric nonlinearity has been introduced and verified by comparing the SNR of four distinct excitation wave forms (sine-wave, square-wave, constant-width and constant duty-cycle pulses) for chirping the pump laser, under constant exposure energy. At low frequencies fixed-pulsewidth chirps of large peak power were found to be superior to all other equal-energy modalities, with an SNR improvement up to two orders of magnitude. Distinct thickness-dependent characteristic delay times in a goat bone were obtained, establishing an active depth resolution range of ∼2.8 mm in a layered skin-fat-bone structure, a favorable result compared to the maximum reported pulsed photothermal radiometric depth resolution <1 mm in turbid biological media.
- Publication:
-
Review of Scientific Instruments
- Pub Date:
- July 2011
- DOI:
- 10.1063/1.3616140
- Bibcode:
- 2011RScI...82g4906K
- Keywords:
-
- biomedical optical imaging;
- bone;
- chirp modulation;
- optical radar;
- photothermal effects;
- radiometry;
- skin;
- 87.63.L-;
- 42.79.Qx;
- 87.63.Hg;
- 07.60.Dq;
- 07.20.-n;
- Visual imaging;
- Range finders remote sensing devices;
- laser Doppler velocimeters SAR and LIDAR;
- Thermography;
- Photometers radiometers and colorimeters;
- Thermal instruments and apparatus