| Literature DB >> 29720708 |
Rayko I Stantchev1, Jessica C Mansfield2, Ryan S Edginton2, Peter Hobson2,3, Francesca Palombo2, Euan Hendry2.
Abstract
Terahertz-spectroscopy probes dynamics and spectral response of collective vibrational modes in condensed phase, which can yield insight into composition and topology. However, due to the long wavelengths employed (λ = 300 μm at 1THz), diffraction limited imaging is typically restricted to spatial resolutions around a millimeter. Here, we demonstrate a new form of subwavelength hyperspectral, polarization-resolved THz imaging which employs an optical pattern projected onto a 6 μm-thin silicon wafer to achieve near-field modulation of a co-incident THz pulse. By placing near-field scatterers, one can measure the interaction of object with the evanescent THz fields. Further, by measuring the temporal evolution of the THz field a sample's permittivity can be extracted with 65 μm spatial resolution due to the presence of evanescent fields. Here, we present the first application of this new approach to articular cartilage. We show that the THz permittivity in this material varies progressively from the superficial zone to the deep layer, and that this correlates with a change in orientation of the collagen fibrils that compose the extracellular matrix (ECM) of the tissue. Our approach enables direct interrogation of the sample's biophysical properties, in this case concerning the structure and permittivity of collagen fibrils and their anisotropic organisation in connective tissue.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29720708 PMCID: PMC5932036 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-25057-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1The experimental scheme: an optical pump pulse is spatially modulated and used to photoexcite a thin silicon wafer, which, in turn, transfers the spatial encoding mask onto a coincident THz pulse. The subsequent THz pulse is then passed through a biological sample onto a time-gated, single-element detector. By varying the arrival time of the electro-optic sampling pulse, we measure the full temporal trace of our THz waveform.
Figure 2(a) Side view of the modelling geometry; a plane wave is incident upon a single aperture placed on top of a dielectric. (b) The permittivity recovered from our model for three different dielectric thicknesses of 30, 50 and 125 μm. The fields processed for the permittivity are due to the complex summation of the far fields transmitted through apertures of sizes from 40 to 700 μm.
Figure 3(a) Photomicrograph and schematic diagram of a cross-section of bovine articular cartilage taken with polarization microscope (Nikon Elclipse E200) at 45° to the articular surface. Boxes of different colour indicate locations from which THz measurements were taken. (b–e) Real and imaginary part, respectively, of the sample’s dielectric function for horizontally (vertically) polarized incident THz beam. Bulk water data from fit parameters of ref.[22]. Note the colour coding of the lines correlates with in part (a), indicating the location on the sample from where THz measurements were performed. The raw THz data as well as absorption maps at 1 THz can be seen in the supplementary information section S2.