Focusing through dynamic tissue with millisecond digital optical phase conjugation
Abstract
Digital optical phase conjugation (DOPC) is a new technique employed in wavefront shaping and phase conjugation for focusing light through or within scattering media such as biological tissues. DOPC is particularly attractive as it intrinsically achieves a high fluence reflectivity in comparison to nonlinear optical approaches. However, the slow refresh rate of liquid crystal spatial light modulators and limitations imposed by computer data transfer speeds have thus far made it difficult for DOPC to achieve a playback latency of shorter than ∼200 ms and, therefore, prevented DOPC from being practically applied to thick living samples. In this paper, we report a novel DOPC system that is capable of 5.3 ms playback latency. This speed improvement of almost 2 orders of magnitude is achieved by using a digital micromirror device, field programmable gate array (FPGA) processing, and a single-shot binary phase retrieval technique. With this system, we are able to focus through 2.3 mm living mouse skin with blood flowing through it (decorrelation time ∼30 ms) and demonstrate that the focus can be maintained indefinitely—an important technological milestone that has not been previously reported, to the best of our knowledge.
Additional Information
© 2015 Optical Society of America. Received 18 May 2015; revised 16 July 2015; accepted 21 July 2015 (Doc. ID 240996); published 7 August 2015. China Scholarship Council (CSC); GIST-Caltech (CG2012); National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) (1U01NS090577-01); National Institutes of Health (NIH) (1DP2OD007307-01). The authors would like to thank Benjamin Judkewitz and Roarke Horstmeyer for their suggestions and discussion.Attached Files
Published - optica-2-8-728.pdf
Accepted Version - nihms716817.pdf
Supplemental Material - 728.AVI
Supplemental Material - optica-2-8-728__si.pdf
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Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC4677392
- Eprint ID
- 60460
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20150924-074000986
- China Scholarship Council
- GIST-Caltech Research Collaboration
- CG2012
- NIH
- 1U01NS090577-01
- NIH
- 1DP2OD007307-01
- Created
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2015-09-24Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2022-05-24Created from EPrint's last_modified field