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Mid-IR hyperspectral imaging with undetected photons
Summary
This study demonstrates a proof-of-concept quantum imaging technique that uses entangled photon pairs to generate mid-infrared hyperspectral images without requiring a mid-infrared camera, and successfully used it to detect microplastics from bottled drinking water. The method is significant because it could enable compact, affordable microplastic detection instruments that don't rely on expensive infrared hardware currently limiting widespread monitoring.
Sensing with undetected photons has become a vibrant, application-driven research domain with a special focus on the mid-infrared (mid-IR) wavelength region. Since the mid-IR contains spectral bands with highly specific and strong molecular absorbance signatures, often referred to as fingerprints, a multitude of different samples and their compositions can be detected and quantified spectroscopically. Enhancing this inherently sample alteration-free spectroscopic method with imaging capabilities leads to a powerful technique for environmental monitoring and biomedical applications that enables automated diagnostics while omitting time-consuming and non-reversible labeling steps. To evade the shortcomings of state-of-the-art instruments for mid-IR hyperspectral microscopy related to cost, complexity, power-consumption, and performance, which are associated with technological challenges for mid-IR cameras and low-noise and broadband mid-IR sources, here, we construct a proof-of-concept nonlinear interferometer in a wide-field imaging arrangement combined with high-resolution spectral acquisition by pixelwise quantum Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. For the broadband range of 2300-3100 cm$^{-1}$, covering the important CH-stretch band, we perform hyperspectral imaging that simultaneously resolves 3500 spatial modes, each with a spectral resolution of 10 cm$^{-1}$ leveraging in total around $10^5$ spatio-spectrally entangled photon modes. Our image acquisition uses a commercial, megapixel sCMOS camera, while a medium-power and compact c.w. pump laser is the only necessary light source. For a moderate speed of 360 voxel/s yielding a dominantly shot-noise influenced signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of 50, we demonstrate the practicality of our novel hyperspectral imaging technique for microplastics detection and bio-imaging tasks, and outline engineering solutions to increase its speed by several orders of magnitude. This shows that our quantum imaging technique is highly promising for applications requiring compact, cost-effective label-free analyses.
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