Presentation
4 March 2019 Supercontinuum sources in optical coherence tomography: how pulse-to-pulse fluctuations affect the noise performance (Conference Presentation)
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Supercontinuum sources are increasingly applied to spectral domain optical coherence tomography (OCT) due to their high power across octave-spanning bandwidths from the visible to the mid-infrared, enabling ultra-high resolution imaging with great flexibility in choice of operating wavelength region [1]. However, one of the main drawback of supercontinuum sources in OCT imaging is the large pulse-to-pulse fluctuations which often acts as the limiting factor in terms of sensitivity rather than the shot noise [2]. The theoretical noise description widely used by the OCT community assumes that the light source operation is based on spontaneous emission, which is not the case for supercontinuum laser source [3]. As a result, the optimal operating conditions must be evaluated experimentally without a reliable prediction [2,4]. Without a reliable theoretical noise model, optimization can be challenging. We present a new and simple noise model that allows prediction of the noise performance of an OCT system driven by a supercontinuum sources, without any assumptions regarding the type of light source. We show that the predictions are in excellent agreement with the experimental results obtained by employing a widely used commercial supercontinuum source. We further investigate the shape of the noise floor in an A-scan obtained with a commercial supercontinuum source, which is not flat, as expected for shot-noise limited light sources. We demonstrate that this shape is predicted solely by the spectral correlations of the supercontinuum, which therefore must be taken into account when characterizing the sensitivity of the OCT system driven by a supercontinuum source. [1] Israelsen, N.M., Maria, M., Mogensen, M., Bojesen, S., Jensen, M., Haedersdal, M., Podoleanu, A., and Bang, O., “The value of ultrahigh resolution OCT in dermatology - delineating the dermo-epidermal junction, capillaries in the dermal papillae and vellus hairs,” Biomedical Optics Express 9(5), 958–963 (2018). [2] Maria, M., Bravo Gonzalo, I., Feuchter, T., Denninger, M., Moselund, P.M., Leick, L., Bang, O., and Podoleanu, A., “Q-switch-pumped supercontinuum for ultra-high resolution optical coherence tomography,” Optics Letters 42(22), 4744–4747 (2017). [3] Dudley, J.M., Genty, G., and Coen, S., “Supercontinuum generation in photonic crystal fiber,” Reviews of Modern Physics 78(4), 1135–1184 (2006). [4] Yuan, W., Mavadia-Shukla, J., Xi, J., Liang, W., Yu, X., Yu, S., and Li, X., “Optimal operational conditions for supercontinuum-based ultrahigh-resolution endoscopic OCT imaging,” Optics Letters 41(2), 250 (2016).
Conference Presentation
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Mikkel Jensen, Ivan B. Gonzalo, Rasmus D. Engelsholm, Michael Maria, Niels M. Israelsen, Adrian G.H. Podoleanu, and Ole Bang "Supercontinuum sources in optical coherence tomography: how pulse-to-pulse fluctuations affect the noise performance (Conference Presentation)", Proc. SPIE 10870, Design and Quality for Biomedical Technologies XII, 108700S (4 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2509374
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KEYWORDS
Optical coherence tomography

Supercontinuum sources

Light sources

Spectral resolution

Image resolution

Laser sources

Mid-IR

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