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Rapidly Measuring Scattered Polarization Parameters of the Individual Suspended Particle with Continuously Large Angular Range.

Authors :
Chen, Yan
Wang, Hongjian
Liao, Ran
Li, Hening
Wang, Yihao
Zhou, Hu
Li, Jiajin
Huang, Tongyu
Zhang, Xu
Ma, Hui
Source :
Biosensors (2079-6374); May2022, Vol. 12 Issue 5, p321, 16p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Suspended particles play a vital role in aquatic environments. We propose a method to rapidly measure the scattered polarization parameters of individual suspended particles with continuously large angular range (PCLAR), from 60° to 120° in one shot. A conceptual setup is built to measure PCLAR with 20 kHz; to verify the setup, 10 μm-diameter silica microspheres suspended in water, whose PCLAR are consistent with those simulated by Mie theory, are measured. PCLAR of 6 categories of particles are measured, which enables high-accuracy classification with the help of a convolutional neural network algorithm. PCLAR of different mixtures of Cyclotella stelligera and silica microspheres are measured to successfully identify particulate components. Furthermore, classification ability comparisons of different angular-selection strategies show that PCLAR enables the best classification beyond the single angle, discrete angles and small-ranged angles. Simulated PCLAR of particles with different size, refractive index, and structure show explicit discriminations between them. Inversely, the measured PCLAR are able to estimate the effective size and refractive index of individual Cyclotella cells. Results demonstrate the method's power, which intrinsically takes the advantage of the optical polarization and the angular coverage. Future prototypes based on this concept would be a promising biosensor for particles in environmental monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20796374
Volume :
12
Issue :
5
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Biosensors (2079-6374)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157130071
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/bios12050321