Ptychographic lens-less birefringence microscopy using a mask-modulated polarization image sensor

Jeongsoo Kim, Seungri Song, Hongseong Kim, Bora Kim, Mirae Park, Seung Jae Oh, Daesuk Kim, Barry Cense, Yong min Huh, Joo Yong Lee, Chulmin Joo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Web of Science)

Abstract

Birefringence, an inherent characteristic of optically anisotropic materials, is widely utilized in various imaging applications ranging from material characterizations to clinical diagnosis. Polarized light microscopy enables high-resolution, high-contrast imaging of optically anisotropic specimens, but it is associated with mechanical rotations of polarizer/analyzer and relatively complex optical designs. Here, we present a form of lens-less polarization-sensitive microscopy capable of complex and birefringence imaging of transparent objects without an optical lens and any moving parts. Our method exploits an optical mask-modulated polarization image sensor and single-input-state LED illumination design to obtain complex and birefringence images of the object via ptychographic phase retrieval. Using a camera with a pixel size of 3.45 μm, the method achieves birefringence imaging with a half-pitch resolution of 2.46 μm over a 59.74 mm2 field-of-view, which corresponds to a space-bandwidth product of 9.9 megapixels. We demonstrate the high-resolution, large-area, phase and birefringence imaging capability of our method by presenting the phase and birefringence images of various anisotropic objects, including a monosodium urate crystal, and excised mouse eye and heart tissues.

Original languageEnglish
Article number19263
Number of pages10
JournalScientific Reports
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2023

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