Significance: Multi-laboratory initiatives are essential in performance assessment and standardization—crucial for bringing biophotonics to mature clinical use—to establish protocols and develop reference tissue phantoms that all will allow universal instrument comparison.
Aim: The largest multi-laboratory comparison of performance assessment in near-infrared diffuse optics is presented, involving 28 instruments and 12 institutions on a total of eight experiments based on three consolidated protocols (BIP, MEDPHOT, and NEUROPT) as implemented on three kits of tissue phantoms. A total of 20 synthetic indicators were extracted from the dataset, some of them defined here anew.
Approach: The exercise stems from the Innovative Training Network BitMap funded by the European Commission and expanded to include other European laboratories. A large variety of diffuse optics instruments were considered, based on different approaches (time domain/frequency domain/continuous wave), at various stages of maturity and designed for different applications (e.g., oximetry, spectroscopy, and imaging).
Results: This study highlights a substantial difference in hardware performances (e.g., nine decades in responsivity, four decades in dark count rate, and one decade in temporal resolution). Agreement in the estimates of homogeneous optical properties was within 12% of the median value for half of the systems, with a temporal stability of <5 % over 1 h, and day-to-day reproducibility of <3 % . Other tests encompassed linearity, crosstalk, uncertainty, and detection of optical inhomogeneities.
Conclusions: This extensive multi-laboratory exercise provides a detailed assessment of near-infrared Diffuse optical instruments and can be used for reference grading. The dataset—available soon in an open data repository—can be evaluated in multiple ways, for instance, to compare different analysis tools or study the impact of hardware implementations.
Performance assessment and standardization are indispensable for instruments of clinical relevance in general and clinical instrumentation based on photon migration/diffuse optics in particular. In this direction, a multi-laboratory exercise was initiated with the aim of assessing and comparing their performances. 29 diffuse optical instruments belonging to 11 partner institutions of a European level Marie Curie Consortium BitMap1 were considered for this exercise. The enrolled instruments covered different approaches (continuous wave, CW; frequency domain, FD; time domain, TD and spatial frequency domain imaging, SFDI) and applications (e.g. mammography, oximetry, functional imaging, tissue spectroscopy). 10 different tests from 3 well-accepted protocols, namely, the MEDPHOT2 , the BIP3 , and the nEUROPt4 protocols were chosen for the exercise and the necessary phantoms kits were circulated across labs and institutions enrolled in the study. A brief outline of the methodology of the exercise is presented here. Mainly, the design of some of the synthetic descriptors, (single numeric values used to summarize the result of a test and facilitate comparison between instruments) for some of the tests will be discussed.. Future actions of the exercise aim at deploying these measurements onto an open data repository and investigating common analysis tools for the whole dataset.
We present results of clinical studies in patients during increase in intra-abdominal pressure (IAP). Changes in brain hemoglobin concentration assessed from time-resolved nearinfrared spectroscopy system were analyzed in frequency domain. The amplitude of power spectral density in respiratory band increases while IAP increases what is related to reduced venous outflow.
We have studied experimentally and theoretically spatial distributions of factors describing sensitivity of the statistical moments of distributions of times of flight (DTOFs) of photons penetrating through the medium to changes in absorption coefficient. Additionally, the moments subtraction procedure, based on difference between statistical moments measured at two interoptode distances was applied in order to modify the sensitivity profiles.
In this paper we present the development of the instrumentation for accurate evaluation of the thermal characteristics of quantum cascade lasers based on CCD thermoreflectance (CCD TR). This method allows rapid thermal characterization of QCLs, as the registration of high-resolution map of the whole device facet lasts only several seconds. The capabilities of the CCD TR are used to study temperature dissipation schemes in different designs of QCLs.
We report on the investigation of thermal performance of QCLs developed at the Institute of Electron Technology, with an emphasis on the influence of different material system, processing technology and device designs. We investigate and compare AlInAs/InGaAs/InP QCLs (lattice matched and strain compensated) of different architectures, i.e., double trench and buried heterostructure (BH) in terms of thermal management.
Experimental results are in very good agreement with numerical predictions of heat dissipation in various device constructions. Numerical model is based on FEM model solved by commercial software package. The model assumes anisotropic thermal conductivity in the AR layers as well as the temperature dependence of thermal conductivities of all materials in the project.
We have observed experimentally improvement of thermal properties of devices based on InP materials, especially for buried heterostructure type. The use of buried heterostructure enhanced the lateral heat dissipation from the active region of QCLs. The BH structure and epilayer-down bonding help dissipate the heat generated from active core of the QCL.
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