1 / 1

Acknowledgements

Investigation of Rough Surface Scattering in Terahertz Imaging Alondra Rivas, Jun Y. Jang, Shijun Sung, Zachary D. Taylor, Warren S. Grundfest Department of Electrical Engineering, Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Los Angeles, Depart of Surgery, DGSOM, Los Angeles.

jolene
Download Presentation

Acknowledgements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Investigation of Rough Surface Scattering in Terahertz ImagingAlondra Rivas, Jun Y. Jang, Shijun Sung, Zachary D. Taylor, Warren S. GrundfestDepartment of Electrical Engineering, Department of Bioengineering, University of California, Los Angeles, Depart of Surgery, DGSOM, Los Angeles Abstract: The Terahertz (THz) imaging maps tissue hydration from its acute sensitivity to water. In THz sensing of biological tissue, surface roughness is of critical importance because scattering from surface roughness changes and confounds the accurate measurement of THz signature of tissue. When applied to samples with varying degrees of surface roughness, variation in signal power and deviation was observed. The experiment was prepared by using grinded brass plates as replicas of human skin. Each brass plate is designed with distinct degree of roughness in order to evaluate the fluctuations in reflected THz signals. In 2-dimensional image, such variations manifests as noise. Statistical analysis was performed on the THz imaging signal from the various brass plate samples. The images were specially fitted in a graphical manner in relation to the THz signal received by the imaging detector and the wavelength of the signal. Ultimately, the effect roughness of the surface in the collected THz image signals was characterized. THz Image Results Objective To characterize the effects of surface roughness in THz imaging using targets polished with known roughness profile (15µm, 36 µm, 80 µm, 265 µm), and apply to remote sensing of biological tissues.* Signal to Noise Ratio Evaluation Conclusion • Look at the variations in signal in a 2-D THz image, caused by surface roughness. • Polish a flat metallic surface with known roughness • Level the imaging target to imaging plane as close as possible • Take THz images of target • Analyze variations in signal pixel-by-pixel • Signal to Noise Ratio by Polishing parameters • Brass plate polished with 15µm sandpaper revealed minimal signal variance (about 0.06V variation over the signal strength of ~5V). • Brass plate polished with 36µm sandpaper showed similar SNR to that of 15 μm, suggesting either the system’s SNR is limited around 53 dB, or roughness does not have heavy impact until 36 μm or higher. • Brass plate polished with 80µm sandpaper is most similar to that of smooth human skin. Signal • Brass plate polished with 265µm sandpaper showed greatest signal variation (as much as 0.25 V). • The degree of surface roughness on a sample is apparent in THz signal variance revealed in the image past 80 um. • Motivation • Terahertz (THz) frequency (100GHz – 10 THz, Tera = 1012) has high sensitivity to water, and low light energy • Has a potential to become highly useful tool in medical imaging to look at tissue’s hydration • In reflection THz sensing of tissues, scattering of THz waves due to the roughness of skin needs to be understood • Tissue is highly inhomogeneous • May or may not have regular features of different sizes • Depends on condition, subjects, location, temperature, etc. • Goal: To see if roughness dominates the THz reflection imaging system signal • Estimate of Typical Roughness of Human Skin • Many ways to measure it: • Line Profiling • Areal Topography • Optical Measurements Scattering of Electromagnetic Waves Polished with 15µm Polished with 36µm • Electromagnetic waves scatters upon hitting an object or surface. Waves hitting a random, rough surface will scatter to random direction. Strength and directivity of reflected(scattered) waves are affected by: • Property of the material (what we are interested in seeing) • Roughness of interface • Property of probing electromagnetic waves (THz radiation) • At THz region, Visible THz Images Future Work • Calibration of the THz imaging plane, for accurate measurement of signal strength is difficult. Optical design of the THz system remains an important task • Test our result against appropriate theoretical prediction, and simulations of scattering from rough surface • Noise contribution of the electronics will be improved to provide cleaner images. • Apply what we have observed in this experiment in clinical images, and determine possible need to flatten the tissue Polished with 36µm Polished with 15µm Polished with 80µm Polished with 265µm References 1.)Tchvialevaa, Lioudmila, et al. "Skin roughness assessment." (2010). 2.)COOK, THOMAS H., et al. "Quantification of the skin's topography by skin profilometry." Itnl’ Journal of Cosmetic Science” 3.)Zimnyakov, Dmitry A., et al. "Speckle pattern statistics analysis in human skin structure investigations." Europto Biomedical Optics‘. 4.)Darvin, Maxim, et al. "Cutaneous concentration of lycopene correlates significantly with the roughness of the skin." European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics. 5.)Manuskiatti, W. D. A. H. I., D. A. Schwindt, and H. I. Maibach. "Influence of age, anatomic site and race on skin roughness and scaliness. " Dermatology “. 6.) Beckmann and Spizzinchino, et al. “The Scattering of Electromagnetic Waves from Rough Surfaces.” (1969).Fielder etl, Texture Analysis of the Surface of the Human Skin, Skin Pharacol. Polished with 80µm Polished with 265µm Evaluation Method of Analysis • Roughness • Many ways to define “rough” surface • Roughness may be measured and characterized by: • Surface height distribution • Statistical description of surface • Deviation from mean height • Correlation Transition from specular reflection to diffuse scattering. The surfaces are: (a) smooth, (b) slightly rough, (3) moderately rough, (d) very rough. Acknowledgements UCLA Center for Excellence in Engineering and Diversity (CEED) • Howard Hughes Medical Institute • Center for Advanced Surgical and Interventional Technology (CASIT) • UCLA Engineering Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science • Special Thanks to the Grundfest Lab and members A random surface with (a) large, (b) small correlation distance.

More Related