Computational diffraction tomographic microscopy with transport of intensity equation using a light-emitting diode array

Optical diffraction tomography (ODT) is an effective label-free technique for quantitatively refractive index imaging, which enables long-term monitoring of the internal three-dimensional (3D) structures and molecular composition of biological cells with minimal perturbation. However, existing optical tomographic methods generally rely on interferometric configuration for phase measurement and sophisticated mechanical systems for sample rotation or beam scanning. Thereby, the measurement is suspect to phase error coming from the coherent speckle, environmental vibrations, and mechanical error during data acquisition process. To overcome these limitations, we present a new ODT technique based on non-interferometric phase retrieval and programmable illumination emitting from a light-emitting diode (LED) array. The experimental system is built based on a traditional bright field microscope, with the light source replaced by a programmable LED array, which provides angle-variable quasi-monochromatic illumination with an angular coverage of ±37 degrees in both x and y directions (corresponding to an illumination numerical aperture of ∼ 0.6). Transport of intensity equation (TIE) is utilized to recover the phase at different illumination angles, and the refractive index distribution is reconstructed based on the ODT framework under first Rytov approximation. The missing-cone problem in ODT is addressed by using the iterative non-negative constraint algorithm, and the misalignment of the LED array is further numerically corrected to improve the accuracy of refractive index quantification. Experiments on polystyrene beads and thick biological specimens show that the proposed approach allows accurate refractive index reconstruction while greatly reduced the system complexity and environmental sensitivity compared to conventional interferometric ODT approaches.

[1]  Qian Chen,et al.  Adaptive step-size strategy for noise-robust Fourier ptychographic microscopy. , 2016, Optics express.

[2]  G. Nomarski,et al.  Application à la métallographie des méthodes interférentielles à deux ondes polarisées , 1955 .

[3]  Chao Zuo,et al.  Multimodal computational microscopy based on transport of intensity equation , 2016, Journal of biomedical optics.

[4]  Chao Zuo,et al.  Lensless phase microscopy and diffraction tomography with multi-angle and multi-wavelength illuminations using a LED matrix. , 2015, Optics express.

[5]  Chao Zuo,et al.  Optical diffraction tomography microscopy with transport of intensity equation using a light-emitting diode array , 2017 .

[6]  F. Zernike How I discovered phase contrast. , 1955, Science.

[7]  M. Teague Deterministic phase retrieval: a Green’s function solution , 1983 .

[8]  R. Horstmeyer,et al.  Wide-field, high-resolution Fourier ptychographic microscopy , 2013, Nature Photonics.

[9]  C. Fang-Yen,et al.  Optical diffraction tomography for high resolution live cell imaging. , 2009, Optics express.

[10]  L. Tian,et al.  Transport of intensity phase retrieval and computational imaging for partially coherent fields: The phase space perspective , 2015 .

[11]  A. Asundi,et al.  Noninterferometric single-shot quantitative phase microscopy. , 2013, Optics letters.

[12]  Björn Kemper,et al.  Tomographic phase microscopy of living three-dimensional cell cultures , 2014, Journal of biomedical optics.