Microstructured polymer optical fibre sensors for opto-acoustic endoscopy


Autoria(s): Broadway, Christian; Gallego, Daniel; Pospori, Andreas; Zubel, Michal; Webb, David J.; Sugden, Kate; Carpintero, Guillermo; Lamela, Horacio
Contribuinte(s)

Kalli, Kyriacos

Mendez, Alexis

Data(s)

27/04/2016

Resumo

Opto-acoustic imaging is a growing field of research in recent years, providing functional imaging of physiological biomarkers, such as the oxygenation of haemoglobin. Piezo electric transducers are the industry standard detector for ultrasonics, but their limited bandwidth, susceptibility to electromagnetic interference and their inversely proportional sensitivity to size all affect the detector performance. Sensors based on polymer optical fibres (POF) are immune to electromagnetic interference, have lower acoustic impedance and a reduced Young's Modulus compared to silica fibres. Furthermore, POF enables the possibility of a wideband sensor and a size appropriate to endoscopy. Micro-structured POF (mPOF) used in an interferometric detector has been shown to be an order of magnitude more sensitive than silica fibre at 1 MHz and 3 times more sensitive at 10 MHz. We present the first opto-acoustic measurements obtained using a 4.7mm PMMA mPOF Bragg grating with a fibre diameter of 130 μm and present the lateral directivity pattern of a PMMA mPOF FBG ultrasound sensor over a frequency range of 1-50 MHz. We discuss the impact of the pattern with respect to the targeted application and draw conclusions on how to mitigate the problems encountered.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/29290/1/Microstructured_polymer_optical_fibre_sensors_for_opto_acoustic_endoscopy.pdf

Broadway, Christian; Gallego, Daniel; Pospori, Andreas; Zubel, Michal; Webb, David J.; Sugden, Kate; Carpintero, Guillermo and Lamela, Horacio (2016). Microstructured polymer optical fibre sensors for opto-acoustic endoscopy. IN: Micro-Structured and Specialty Optical Fibres IV. Kalli, Kyriacos and Mendez, Alexis (eds) SPIE Proceedings . Bellingham, WA (US): SPIE.

Publicador

SPIE

Relação

http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/29290/

Tipo

Book Section

NonPeerReviewed