4.6 Article

All-Optical Phase Recovery: Diffractive Computing for Quantitative Phase Imaging

Journal

ADVANCED OPTICAL MATERIALS
Volume 10, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adom.202200281

Keywords

diffractive optical networks; deep learning; holography; light-matter interaction; optical computing; optical machine learning; quantitative phase imaging (QPI)

Funding

  1. ONR (Office of Naval Research)

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This article demonstrates a diffractive QPI network that can achieve all-optical phase recovery. The quantitative phase image of an object is synthesized by converting the input phase information into intensity variations at the output plane. This network can potentially replace traditional QPI systems and alleviate the computational burden, leading to efficient, high frame-rate, and compact phase imaging systems.
Quantitative phase imaging (QPI) is a label-free computational imaging technique that provides optical path length information of specimens. In modern implementations, the quantitative phase image of an object is reconstructed digitally through numerical methods running in a computer, often using iterative algorithms. Here, a diffractive QPI network that can perform all-optical phase recovery is demonstrated, and the quantitative phase image of an object is synthesized by converting the input phase information of a scene into intensity variations at the output plane. A diffractive QPI network is a specialized all-optical processor designed to perform a quantitative phase-to-intensity transformation through passive diffractive surfaces that are spatially engineered using deep learning and image data. Forming a compact, all-optical network that axially extends only approximate to 200-300 lambda, where lambda is the illumination wavelength, this framework can replace traditional QPI systems and related digital computational burden with a set of passive transmissive layers. All-optical diffractive QPI networks can potentially enable power-efficient, high frame-rate, and compact phase imaging systems that might be useful for various applications, including, e.g., microscopy and sensing.

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