Mitigating fringing in discrete frequency infrared imaging using time-delayed integration Article Swipe
YOU?
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· 2018
· Open Access
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· DOI: https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.9.000832
Infrared (IR) spectroscopic microscopes provide the potential for label-free quantitative molecular imaging of biological samples, which can be used to aid in histology, forensics, and pharmaceutical analysis. Most IR imaging systems use broadband illumination combined with a spectrometer to separate the signal into spectral components. This technique is currently too slow for many biomedical applications such as clinical diagnosis, primarily due to the availability of bright mid-infrared sources and sensitive MCT detectors. There has been a recent push to increase throughput using coherent light sources, such as synchrotron radiation and quantum cascade lasers. While these sources provide a significant increase in intensity, the coherence introduces fringing artifacts in the final image. We demonstrate that applying time-delayed integration in one dimension can dramatically reduce fringing artifacts with minimal alterations to the standard infrared imaging pipeline. The proposed technique also offers the potential for less expensive focal plane array detectors, since linear arrays can be more readily incorporated into the proposed framework.
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- Type
- article
- Language
- en
- Landing Page
- https://doi.org/10.1364/boe.9.000832
- OA Status
- gold
- Cited By
- 16
- References
- 30
- Related Works
- 10
- OpenAlex ID
- https://openalex.org/W2785160250