Ph.D. Dissertation

Improvements in Digital Holographic Microscopy by Dr. Raul Castaneda

Abstract: The Ph.D. dissertation consists of developing a series of innovative computational methods for improving digital holographic microscopy (DHM). DHM systems are widely used in quantitative phase imaging for studying micrometer-size biological and non-biological samples. As any imaging technique, DHM systems have limitations that reduce their applicability. Current limitations in DHM systems are: i) the number of holograms (more than three holograms) required in slightly off-axis DHM systems to reconstruct the object phase information without applying complex computational algorithms; ii) the lack of an automatic and robust computation algorithm to compensate for the interference angle and reconstruct the object phase information without phase distortions in off-axis DHM systems operating in telecentric and image plane conditions; iii) the necessity of an automatic computational algorithm to simultaneously compensate for the interference angle and numerically focus out-of-focus holograms on reconstructing the object phase information without phase distortions in off-axis DHM systems operating in telecentric regime; iv) the deficiency of reconstructing phase images without phase distortions at video-rate speed in off-axis DHM operating in telecentric regime, and image plane conditions; v) the lack of an open-source library for any DHM optical configuration; and, finally, vi) the tradeoff between speckle contrast and spatial resolution existing in current computational strategies to reduce the speckle contrast. This Ph.D. dissertation is motivated to overcome or at least reduce the six limitations mentioned above. Each chapter of this dissertation presents and discusses a novel computational method from the theoretical and experimental point of view to address each of these limitations.

The presentation of this work can be watched on our YouTube channel.

PhD_RaulCastaneda.pdf