SYSTEM AND METHODS FOR DIFFERENTIAL IMAGING USING A LOCK-IN CAMERA
20220404601 · 2022-12-22
Inventors
- Damien LOTERIE (Ecublens, CH)
- Chiara BONATI (Ecublens, CH)
- Timothé LAFOREST (Crozet, FR)
- Christophe Moser (Lausanne, CH)
Cpc classification
G02B21/367
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
The present invention describes an imaging system that allows visualization of a wide range of samples both in terms of morphology and in terms of material (e.g. density distribution, varying chemical composition, or anything that induces a change of optical path). The application of this imaging system includes absorptive samples as well as nearly and fully transparent samples with respect to the wavelength of illumination.
Two elements are key in this system: the use of a so-called lock-in camera, and the synchronization of the recording to a modulation of choice along the image forming apparatus. Such modulation can consist for example in modulation of the illumination, use of filters, tilt/rotation of the sample or of certain microscope components.
Claims
1.-15. (canceled)
16. An imaging system comprising at least one incoherent illumination source which can be switched or modulated between different states in synchronization with a lock-in signal, and a lock-in image camera to perform a lock-in amplification of a difference image at a pixel level.
17. The system according to claim 16, wherein at least one pair of incoherent illumination sources is asymmetrically located with respect to an optical axis.
18. The system according to claim 16, wherein said at least one or at least one pair of incoherent illumination source(s) is provided asymmetrically with respect to an optical axis of the system.
19. The system according to claim 16, further comprising an opaque stop element located asymmetrically with respect to an optical axis of the system, so that during operation part of an emission from the source is blocked by said stop element.
20. The system according to claim 16, further comprising at least one lens in the optical path between a sample and the lock-in camera.
21. The system according to claim 16, further comprising a positioning element which can switch or modulate a position of a sample between two mirrored states.
22. The system according to claim 16, further comprising an additional phase plate which can be switched or modulated between two mirrored states.
23. The system according to claim 16, wherein light from said at least one incoherent illumination source is linearly polarized and a direction of polarization of said linearly polarized light can be modulated or switched.
24. The system according to claim 16, wherein said at least one incoherent illumination source is variable, so that its wavelength can be modulated or switched.
25. A method to record a difference image of a sample, comprising the steps of: modulating one or more parameters of an imaging system according to claim 16, in synchronization with a lock-in signal; and recording with lock-in amplification an image representing a difference in appearance of said sample between the modulation states of said parameter or parameters.
26. The method according to claim 25, wherein said modulation comprises alternately switching illumination sources which are asymmetrically located with respect to an optical axis of said imaging system, said switching being synchronized with a lock-in signal, and an image representing a difference in appearance of said sample between the switching states of said illumination sources is recorded.
27. The method according to claim 25, wherein a calibration step is performed prior to the recording to obtain identical background values.
28. The method according to claim 25, wherein difference images obtained from at least one pair of different illumination sources are combined to retrieve a quantitative or qualitative phase image.
29. The method according to claim 25, wherein said modulation comprises switching or modulating a direction of polarization of at least one illumination source of the sample in synchronization with a lock-in signal, to record an image of said sample showing a difference in appearance of said sample between two states of polarized illumination from said at least one illumination source.
30. The method according to claim 25, wherein said modulation comprises switching or modulating a wavelength of at least one illumination source in synchronization with a lock-in signal, to record an image of said sample showing a difference in appearance of said sample between different wavelengths of illumination from said at least one illumination source.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017] These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and accompanying non-limiting drawings where:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0030] The system described here is an imaging setup that exploits the modulation of a given parameter in the imaging system to perform a lock-in amplification of the difference image between different states of said modulation.
[0031] In lock-in detection, a probing signal is first modulated by multiplication with a reference signal, which is typically a sinusoidal signal with a certain frequency f.sub.R. This modulated probing signal interrogates a target. The resulting signal from the target is detected and is low-pass filtered, so that only the signal components that are at the same frequency f.sub.R are retained, while all other contributions are strongly suppressed. This type of acquisition can be replicated over many “pixels”, which is the concept of lock-in cameras (for example the heliCam C3 by Heliotis). The use of lock-in cameras has been demonstrated for coherent interferometric microscopy systems.
[0032] According to the present invention, the lock-in camera is instead part of an imaging setup based on incoherent illumination and is used to recover the difference image between different states of modulation the optical system.
[0033] The key step of this invention comprises modulating one or more components of the imaging apparatus, in such a way that images with opposite contrasts are generated sequentially in time on the camera.
[0034] This modulation is synchronized in both frequency and phase to the reference sinusoidal signal of the lock-in camera. An example of the timing sequence for such an acquisition cycle is shown in
[0035] As discussed in the introduction, thanks to the amplification provided by the lock-in technique, the resulting image is sensitive to very small variations against a strong background.
[0036] An example of an embodiment of this invention is schematically represented in
[0037] The light from an incoherent source 201 is projected onto a sample 202 in the form of a bundle of propagating rays 207, with a certain asymmetry with respect to the optical axis 206.
[0038]
[0042] This list is not limiting and any other configuration that generates an asymmetric angular distribution of the light intensity can be used without deviating from the scope of this invention.
[0043] After the light propagates through the sample 202, it is collected by an imaging system in the optical path between the sample 202 and the lock-in camera 205, that forms an image on the lock-in camera 205. In one embodiment of the invention, the imaging system is a microscope, where the light is first collimated by an objective lens 203, and then focused by a tube lens 204 giving a magnified image of the sample.
[0044] According to the theory described in Tian, L., Waller, L. Quantitative differential phase contrast imaging in an LED array microscope. Optics Express. 2015, Vol. 23, 9, the formed image will highlight the changes of phase that light undergoes when passing through the sample. When one of the modulations listed above takes place, a similar image is obtained, but with reversed contrast. As shown in the same paper, the absorption features of the sample will look the same in both images, so upon subtraction they are canceled. In this way only the relevant phase information is retained. Still, if the phase variations are very small, the single image will contain a strong background component with small modulations on top which, in the worst cases, might have amplitudes close to the noise level. The result of this subtraction is then a noisy, zero-mean image with low intensity features.
[0045] In the system according to the embodiment of the present invention shown in
[0046] In this way, the effective output of the camera is directly the “difference” image between the two states of the imaging system. Thanks to the synchronization to the reference sinusoidal signal, only the variation of intensity due to phase variations in the sample will be recorded in the image. Background and noise are strongly suppressed at the pixel level. The main advantages of this scheme are that: [0047] It is possible to obtain a “full field” image (where all the pixel values are retrieved at the same time and not via a scanning mechanism); [0048] The difference image is directly digitized inside the camera at the pixel-level, strongly reducing the noise in this difference image compared to the case where two separate recordings are subtracted; [0049] Higher illumination power can be brought onto the detector without reaching saturation of its pixels, as the DC component is analogically removed by the camera itself; in a typical shot-noise limited configuration, when the intensity I increases, the noise only increases by √{square root over (I)}, so being able to use more power without reaching saturation brings an improvement in the ratio between signal and noise, making detection more sensitive; [0050] Other sources of noise, like source noise or vibration, that take place at frequencies not synchronized with the modulation fr, are also suppressed by the lock-in detection; [0051] The acquisition speed is limited only by the modulation rate and the acquisition rate of the lock-in camera;
[0052] The relevant sample features are digitized over a much higher number of digital levels: the use of the bit depth is optimized and is used fully to encode the important structures, while none of the dynamic range is spent on encoding of the background level. It is important that the switched or modulated light is carefully tuned in such a way that the background it provides remains equal in the different images, in order to provide correct subtraction of said background. Differences in illumination will be amplified together with the relevant sample structures, so it is fundamental to minimize these differences in order to be able to take full advantage of the dynamic range without incurring in saturation. Preferably, two alternately switched sources of light are fine tuned to produce equal illumination, such that the lock-in amplification removes the equal background and more power can be used without reaching saturation. The increase of power from the light sources allows to increase the SNR and thus the sensitivity, and/or to optimize the encoding of relevant information over the whole bit depth.
[0053] A more specific embodiment of this invention for differential phase contrast is shown in
[0054] If the sample 202 is for example the one represented in
[0055] If the sample is additionally illuminated with the source 208 with opposite angle (as in
[0056] In the system according to the embodiment of the present invention shown in
[0057] Other embodiments can be envisioned for phase contrast. In this case, the only requirement is to have an asymmetry in the imaging apparatus: [0058] Any asymmetry in the illumination [0059] Tilting/rotating the sample with a positioning element that can switch or modulate the position of said sample [0060] Tilting/rotating extra phase plates [0061] Tilting/rotating opaque stop elements between the illumination source and the sample.
[0062] By synchronizing any of these modulations to the reference sinusoidal signal, a similar result to that described above is obtained.
[0063] In an alternate embodiment of this invention, illumination is linearly polarized and the direction of polarization is modulated in synchronization with the lock-in signal. As a result, the lock-in camera records the difference image between two states of polarized illumination. It can be used for example to detect parts of a sample with a different response to these states of polarization, for example asymmetrical nanoparticles which absorb preferentially in one direction of polarization, or birefringent materials which refract light differently depending on polarization.
[0064] In a further alternate embodiment of this invention, the illumination is switched rapidly between two different wavelengths in synchronization with the lock-in signal. As a result, the lock-in camera records the difference image between two wavelengths of illumination. It can be used for example to record slight differences in the transmission, absorption or scattering of a sample between both wavelengths of illumination.
[0065] The present invention is suitable for imaging amplification of 1) any material having structures which possess either a different index of refraction than the surrounding space (in the volume of the material), or 2) samples that have a topography (i.e. surface) that is varying while the bulk index of refraction is the same, or a combination of those materials 1) and 2).
[0066] Examples for materials 1) include biological material such as native tissue, organoids, and 3D printed tissue. Examples for materials 2) and/or include semi-conductor wafers, electronics, solar cells, and additive printed electronics showing a combination of topography and index change.
[0067] The present invention will now be described with reference to non-limiting examples and drawings.
[0068] In this section, experimental results are discussed regarding the improvements in imaging obtained with the system according to
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[0072] The pattern that appeared on top of the sample structures is due to differences between the two illuminations. Since this image was starting to show saturation, this is the limit to the increase of power with the current illumination system. With a more uniform illumination, it would be possible to obtain even more improvement.
[0073] The fixed pattern of illumination can be removed upon subtraction of a lock-in image obtained with no sample, as shown in
[0074] In order to compare the two methods described above (differential phase contrast imaging and standard differential phase contrast), first the average amplitude of the cross section of the rectangular shapes was calculated.
[0075] (a) is a cross section from the standard differential phase contrast image, take along the blue line shown in
[0076] (b) is a cross section from the lock-in differential phase contrast image according to the present invention, take along the blue line shown in
[0077] It can be seen that the shape is similar, but the scale of grey levels is ten times higher in the lock-in cross-section according to the present invention. On average, according to the present invention the peak-to-peak amplitude is encoded over nine times more grey levels.
[0078] Further, the noise as the background free standard deviation of pixel values in the red areas shown in
where
[0079] A.sub.ptp is the peak-to-peak amplitude and
[0080] σ is the standard deviation of the noise.
[0081] The resulting SNR for standard differential phase contrast was 5.9 while for the lock-in according to the present invention it was 31.2. This means that according to the present invention the SNR is improved by a factor of 5.2.
[0082] This can be further improved if an even more uniform illumination is used: in this case, the image would not be saturated yet, and the power of the sources could be further increased, thus bringing about even higher SNR values.