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Optica, Optics Express, 14(17), p. 11834, 2009

DOI: 10.1364/oe.17.011834

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Three-dimensional holographic imaging of living tissue using a highly sensitive photorefractive polymer device

Journal article published in 2009 by M. Salvador, J. Prauzner, S. Kober, K. Meerholz ORCID, J. J. Turek, K. Jeong, D. D. Nolte
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Photorefractive materials are dynamic holographic storage media that are highly sensitive to coherent light fields and relatively insensitive to a uniform light background. This can be exploited to effectively separate ballistic light from multiply-scattered light when imaging through turbid media. We developed a highly sensitive photorefractive polymer composite and incorporated it into a holographic optical coherence imaging system. This approach combines the advantages of coherence-domain imaging with the benefits of holography to form a high-speed wide-field imaging technique. By using coherence-gated holography, image-bearing ballistic light can be captured in real-time without computed tomography. We analyzed the implications of Fourier-domain and image-domain holography on the field of view and image resolution for a transmission recording geometry, and demonstrate holographic depth-resolved imaging of tumor spheroids with 12 microm axial and 10 microm lateral resolution, achieving a data acquisition speed of 8 x 10(5) voxels/s.