Publication | Closed Access
The effects of internal refractive index variation in near-infrared optical tomography: a finite element modelling approach
85
Citations
28
References
2003
Year
EngineeringOptical TestingBiomedical EngineeringInternal Refractive IndexFinite ElementTissue ImagingOptical PropertiesInfrared OpticBiophysicsRadiologyOphthalmologyMedical ImagingNear-infrared SpectroscopyBiophotonicsNear-infrared Optical TomographyRefractive IndexOptical ImagingApplied PhysicsBiomedical ImagingHomogeneous Refractive IndexOptical Coherence TomographyMedicine
Near-infrared (NIR) tomography is a technique used to measure light propagation through tissue and generate images of internal optical property distributions from boundary measurements. Most popular applications have concentrated on female breast imaging, neonatal and adult head imaging, as well as muscle and small animal studies. In most instances a highly scattering medium with a homogeneous refractive index is assumed throughout the imaging domain. Using these assumptions, it is possible to simplify the model to the diffusion approximation. However, biological tissue contains regions of varying optical absorption and scatter, as well as varying refractive index. In this work, we introduce an internal boundary constraint in the finite element method approach to modelling light propagation through tissue that accounts for regions of different refractive indices. We have compared the results to data from a Monte Carlo simulation and show that for a simple two-layered slab model of varying refractive index, the phase of the measured reflectance data is significantly altered by the variation in internal refractive index, whereas the amplitude data are affected only slightly.
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