Invention Grant
- Patent Title: Single-shot differential phase contrast quantitative phase imaging method based on color multiplexed illumination
-
Application No.: US17766088Application Date: 2020-08-18
-
Publication No.: US11893719B2Publication Date: 2024-02-06
- Inventor: Qian Chen , Yao Fan , Chao Zuo , Jiasong Sun , Xiangpeng Pan , Shijie Feng , Yuzhen Zhang , Guohua Gu , Jiaji Li , Jialin Zhang
- Applicant: NANJING UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Applicant Address: CN Jiangsu
- Assignee: NANJING UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Current Assignee: NANJING UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
- Current Assignee Address: CN Nanjing
- Agency: Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP
- Priority: CN 1910977145.X 2019.10.15
- International Application: PCT/CN2020/109735 2020.08.18
- International Announcement: WO2021/073245A 2021.04.22
- Date entered country: 2022-04-01
- Main IPC: G06T5/50
- IPC: G06T5/50 ; G02B21/36

Abstract:
A single-shot differential phase contrast quantitative phase imaging method based on color multiplexing illumination. A color multiplexing illumination solution is used to realize single-shot differential phase contrast quantitative phase imaging. In the single-shot color multiplexing illumination solution, three illumination wavelengths of red, green, and blue are used to simultaneously illuminate a sample, and the information of the sample in multiple directions is converted into intensity information on different channels of a color image. By performing channel separation on this color image, the information about the sample at different spatial frequencies can be obtained. Such a color multiplexing illumination solution requires only one acquired image, thus enhancing the transfer response of the phase transfer function of single-shot differential phase contrast imaging in the entire frequency range, and achieving real-time dynamic quantitative phase imaging with a high contrast, a high resolution, and a high stability. In addition, an alternate illumination strategy is provided, so that a completely isotropic imaging resolution at the limit acquisition speed of the camera can be achieved.
Public/Granted literature
Information query