EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORETICAL DEVELOPMENTS FOR WAVEFRONT SHAPING
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Abstract
Scattering media, such as biological tissues, multi-layer materials, and opaque
materials, inherently distort and diffuse light, which pose significant challenges
for larger-depth optical microscopy and imaging techniques, especially for
deep tissue microscopy in the biological domain, which is currently a highly
active research area. Focusing of light, or the formation of complex light
patterns inside or through turbid media is a challenging task due to refractive
index inhomogeneity, random light scattering, and speckle noise formation.
However, amplitude or phase modulation-based iterative wavefront shaping
techniques with a suitable optimized cost function show a potential way to
focus the light inside scattering media. This thesis work addresses feedback
assisted binary phase modulation and wavefront shaping techniques both in
the experimental domain and theoretical methodologies to overcome specific
challenges in focusing light and structured light formation through scattering
media for next-generation optical microscopy and industrial applications. The
main contribution of the present work is the development of robust, efficient,
and cost-effective experimental setups with binary phase modulation, as well
as the development of cost functions for advancing the focusing of light in
a controlled manner at the target location, where pixel-to-pixel intensity and
spatial correlation have been established. Both theoretical and experimental
contributions towards the development of the wavefront shaping system and
optimizing the wavefront of light with computational algorithms are discussed.
This thesis demonstrates experimental systems development for feedback
based wavefront shaping with binary phase modulation using an affordable
ferroelectric liquid crystal (FLC) based spatial light modulator (SLM). FLC
SLMsprovide several advantages over nematic liquid crystal SLMs (NLC-SLMs)
and digital micromirror devices (DMDs). FLC-SLMs do not necessitate phase
calibration due to their simplified binary-phase operation and are significantly
faster in terms of pixel response times (∼40 µs) as compared to the NLC-SLM
(∼10 ms). Moreover, FLC-SLMs provide double the enhancement compared to
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DMDsandoffer a cost-effective solution for wavefront shaping with high-speed
binary phase modulation (up to 4.5 kHz). In this thesis work, we have developed
a feedback-assisted, cost-effective, binary-phase based wavefront shaping system
with FLC-SLM that can construct high-resolution multiple complex hetero
structures simultaneously in 3D volume using an optimized single-phase mask.
The FLC-SLM based wavefront shaping setup has been further reconfigured to
operate in both transmission and diffuse-reflection modes for its implementation
in focus-spot formation and complex light structure formation with the scattering
media, suchasbiological tissue and standard groundglassdiffuser. Furthermore,
we have advanced the experimental setup for controlling the fluorescence light
inside the fluorescence-stained biological tissue in diffuse-reflection mode.
In the field of wavefront shaping, obtaining tightly focused light spots with
controlled intensity, uniformity over the focus spot, and advancing contrast in
a controlled manner is highly desired and, it adds advantages across multiple
research domains. In feedback-based wavefront shaping, traditional cost func
tions such as target intensity (η) and peak-to-background ratio (PBR) overshoot
the set-value of intensity at focus-spot, lack uniformity over the focus-spot, and
struggle with intensity control over the focus-spot when focus through scattering
media. To overcome these limitations, we have derived and proposed an ℓ2
normbasedquadraticcostfunction(QCF)thatestablishespixel-to-pixel intensity,
spatial correlation and enables contrast achievement in a controlled manner
while maintaining uniformity across the light focus-spot. Both simulations and
experiments have been performed extensively using the proposed cost function
QCF, and thereafter, its performance has been compared with the commonly
used η and PBR based cost functions. The results evidently indicate that the
QCF achieves superior performance in terms of intensity control at the focus
spot, provides better uniformity, and achieves background noise suppression. In
contrast, both the η and PBR cost functions exhibit uncontrolled intensity gain
compared to the proposed QCF. The QCF is found to be suitable for applications
requiring intensity control at the focus-spot, better uniformity, and effective
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background noise suppression. This method holds significant promise for
applications where intensity control is critical, and energy transfer in a controlled
manner is necessary, such as laser materials processing, bio-incubation systems,
next-generation deep-tissue optical microscopy, photolithography, photothermal
treatments and many more to mention.
To address the challenges of light-scattering in scattering media and forming
complex light structures or specific light patterns through highly scattering
media, this thesis demonstrates the coupling of the data regression model in
the R-squared metric and uses its advantages as a cost function iteratively in
the genetic algorithm to advance the resolution and structural uniformity while
maintaining the contrast for complex-structures formation through scattering
media. The R-squared metric is analyzed in the genetic algorithm to optimize
the binary phase mask alongwith the developed FLC-SLM based binary-phase
wavefront shaping system and has been validated with a 120-grit ground glass
diffuser and fresh chicken tissue samples of thickness 307 µm and 812 µm.
The detailed results show that the proposed data regression model assisted
R-squared cost function, combined with the developed FLC-SLM based cost
effective wavefront shaping system, can construct high-resolution multiple
complex hetero-structures simultaneously in 3D volume using an optimized
single phase-mask. Multiple complex light structures and gradient contrast light
formation have been reconstructed to validate the algorithm and binary-phase
modulation based FLC-SLM system for wavefront shaping.
Focusing the light into desired patterns at the specific region of interest is
significantly more challenging than focusing on spots. There has always been
a trade-off between resolution and the contrast enhancement of the structured
light patterns in wavefront shaping. When the desired pattern is constructed
using conventional cost functions, such as η or PBR, it has been observed
that these methods enhance contrast non-uniformly over a large area and
show missing intensity pixels in the structure; Moreover, they fail to resolve
the complex structure. To address this, our present work demonstrates the
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coupling of our proposed ℓ2-norm based cost function with Pearson’s correlation
coefficient based cost function and proposes regularized cost function (RCF) for
advancing the contrast and maintaining the high resolution of structured light
patterns at the same time. Both the simulations and experiments have been
performed, and it has been found that the proposed RCF significantly advances
the contrast and structural uniformity for focusing light through scattering media
as well as for diffuse-reflection mode. The algorithm advancement in this
thesis, alongwith system development, holds significant promise in the real-life
applications, such as 2D/3D holographic displays, structured illumination mi
croscopy, optogenetics, optical coherence tomography, endoscopy, fluorescence
imaging, fluorescence microscopy, multi-photon microscopy, photodynamic
therapy, optical communication, and optical trapping