The present invention relates to a method and device for holographic refractometry useful for the comparision of refractive index between an object and a surrounding medium using digital holography.
A commonly known method for determination of refractive index of small inhomogenous, transparent objects is the method known as the Becke method. The Becke method involves placing the object in a medium having a known refractive index, for example a Refractive Index Liquid. The sample is arranged in a microscope and light is passed through the sample. The person using the microscope moves the focal plane upwards (or downwards). The Becke lines seem to move outwards or inwards relative to the contour of the object. The movement of the Becke lines is dependent on whether the refractive index of the object is lower or higher than the refractive index of the surrounding medium. By placing the object in several media having different refractive index and observing when the movement of the contour change direction as the focal plane is moved upwards, the refractive index of the object may be determined. Thus, the Becke method of determining refractive index of an object is an indirect method.
The Becke method involves that a person has to move the focal plane of the microscope by hand while observing the movement of the contours of the object. Thus, the method does not lend itself for automation. Moreover, the analysis has to be performed at site. Thus, it is not possible to make an image of the object and to analyze the image afterwards in another environment or at another time.
Other methods of measuring refractive index are the phase contrast method and the oblique illumination method, see for example W. D. Nesse, “Introduction to optical Mineralogy”, Oxford University Press, New York, second edition, 1991.
Refractometry has applications in different sciences. The index of refraction is material specific, which is useful in identification of different substances in a blend. In pharmacology, particle size characterization and distribution of chemical substances play an important role in research and manufacturing. In mineralogy, the index of refraction is an important parameter in classifying different minerals.
Holographic methods are common today. For example DE2133803 discloses a holographic method according to which refractive index changes can be observed. The document does not deal in detail with how such measurement is performed.
Accordingly, it is an objective of the invention to provide a method and a device that makes it possible to automate the process of measuring the refractive index of an object.
Another objective of the invention is to provide a method and device that enables remote analyzing of the refractive index of an object at any time after that an image of the object has been obtained.
These objectives are met with a method and device for determining refractive index of an object compared to a refractive index of a surrounding medium, by exposing said sample to a laser object beam and letting the object beam interfere with a laser reference beam to obtain a hologram, analyzing the hologram for phase information, and determining if the refractive index of the object is higher or lower than the refractive index of the surrounding medium based on said phase information. The method may be performed by a computer.
The method may be used for counting the number of particles having a first refractive index and counting the number of particles having a second refractive index in a specific area of said sample if the object has particles of a first substance having a first refractive index and a second substance having a second refractive index and a medium having a refractive index between said first and second refractive index. In this way the relationship between the substances may be calculated.
Further objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description of several embodiments of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:
An object 12 is arranged close to the beam splitter 9. The laser beam passing through the object is collected by a sensor 8. The reference beam is diverted towards the sensor 8 by the beam splitter 9, whereby the sensor 8 comprehends the reference beam as originating from a virtual point source 13 close to the object.
By means of the two halfwave plates, the intensity in the reference beam and the object beam may be controlled and at the same time keep the polarization of the fields linear.
The experimental digital holograpy setup implies a spherical reference point source close to the illuminated object. This gives approximately the same curvature of the reference field and the object field and hence low spatial frequencies of the hologram. To achieve a large numerical aperture of the reference field and keep the point source close to the object, a 0.25 pitch GRIN lens is used to widen the reference beam. The GRIN lens has a numerical aperture of 0.37, a diameter of 1.0 mm and is placed in a holder close to the beam splitter. The reference point source is thereby reflected by the beam splitter to the sensor. The arrangement with the beam splitter gives a virtual point source which can be placed close to the object.
In the experimental setup, it is not possible to measure the object field directly. Instead an approximation of the object field and the reference field, i.e. a sampled version of the interference pattern, is measured by the sensor. The object field is used to determine an image of the object. The evaluation of the object field is performed in a computer by means of FFT (fast Fourier transforms).
The experimental setup described so far may be altered in different applications. For example, the Iris diafragm 16 may be omitted as well as the members 3, 4, 5, 6 and/or 7. The laser beams can be confined to a closed region with optical fibers and hence eliminate the mirrors 1 and 10, etc.
In the method according to the invention, it is possible to see transparent objects, such as biological specimens, without any preparation. To the contrary, in the prior art, specimens are routinely stained. This approach is unsatisfactory in many respects. The stain, for example, kills a specimen whose life processes may be under study.
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In the present invention, a single hologram is obtained. A hologram comprises information of several focal planes. Consequently, it is possible to maintain the hologram and later analyze it according to the Becke method. The computer may be programmed to produce images of the crystals at different focal depth and the movement of the contours of the crystals may be visualized.
Furthermore, it is observed that a hologram comprises phase information. By programming the computer to indicate the phase of the laser light from the object, it is possible to generate an image, in which the phase is displayed, for example as different colors or hues.
It has been observed that the phase order is different depending on whether the object has a refractive index, which is larger or smaller than the surrounding liquid refractive index.
Thus, the index of refraction of an isotropic object can be determined with repeated measurement where the surrounding medium or liquid is changed until the phase order has been reversed. The index of refraction for the object is then between the indexes of refraction for the two liquids having different phase order.
Moreover, two different isotropic objects can be separated if the surrounding liquid is matched somewhere between the indexes of refraction for the two objects.
Such separation may for example be performed for chrystals of Sodium Chloride NaCl and chrystals of Potassium Chloride KCl. Chrystals having an average size of about 40 μm were used. These chrystals are isotropic, i.e. they have one index of refraction irrespectively of the direction of illumination. Their respective indices of refraction are denoted nNacl and nKCl. The crystals are mounted in a refractive index liquid with a refractive index denoted nm, such that the refractive indices are ordered as nKCl<nm<dNaCl.
The phase is changed when going through the crystals. The phase shift can be observed as a color change from black, over gray, to white and back to black.
To obtain an image that depicts the optical thickness of the sample, the phase is unwrapped and the large scale phase variation of the illuminating wave is removed by fitting the unwrapped phase image to a polynomial. In these unwrapped and background corrected phase images the images depict the contrast in refractive index times the propagation length through each crystal. Moreover, to improve the interpretation of the unwrapped background corrected phase images, the phase is plotted as a contour plot with 2π between each contour. In the contour plot, positive values are represented as darker colors and negative values as brighter colors; see
In this way, the crystals may be counted or the volume distribution may be calculated.
Anisotropic objects have different indexes of refraction in different directions. The co-polarized part of the scattered light from an anisotropic object seems to have been scattered by an isotropic object with an effective index of refraction n′. By multiple exposures of the same object with a step by step rotation of the polarization of the illuminating light, the smallest and the largest of the principal refractive indexes can be extracted. The anisotropic objects considered here are uniaxial, i.e. they have one optical axis where the index of refraction varies with polarization.
The image is calculated by a computer and may be displayed as different shades of gray or as colors. The computer may be programmed to determine the number of objects that have a refractive index larger than or smaller than the refractive index of the surrounding medium.
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For example, if the method is to be used for determining the relationship between the number of particles of two isotropic substances having different refractive index, a medium is used with a refractive index in between the refractive indexes of the substances. In the processed hologram, the substances will appear as particles having different gray shade compared to the surrounding medium, for example substantially white and substantially black particles. The computer may be programmed to count the number of particles of each type on a specific surface area of the sample. Thus, the relationship between the two substances may be fully automatically calculated by the computer. The computer may as well be programmed to calculate the surface that each type of particles occupy. In the case of known indices of refraction, the computer may also be programmed to calculate the volume ratio between the two particles.
The method according to the invention lends itself to automatization so that the control of the blend of particles of substances in a batch may be controlled continuously over time by arranging samples continuously and performing the method as described above. Up to now, there is no reliable real time method of making such measurements.
The invention has been described above with reference to a specific embodiment of the invention shown on the drawings. However, a skilled person reading this specification may realize other combinations of the different features indicated in the embodiment, and such other combinations are intended to be within the scope of the invention. The invention is only limited by the appended patent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0302676-2 | Oct 2003 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE04/01437 | 10/7/2004 | WO | 1/8/2007 |