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Papers
20 resultsShowing papers similar to Digital holographic microplastics detection and characterization in heterogeneous samples via deep learning
ClearAutomatic Detection of Microplastics by Deep Learning Enabled Digital Holography
Researchers developed a digital holography system combined with deep learning to automatically detect and identify microplastics in water without manual image analysis. The system processes raw holographic images directly, offering a faster and more scalable approach to microplastic monitoring in environmental samples.
Microplastic pollution monitoring with holographic classification and deep learning
This study used digital holographic microscopy combined with deep learning to classify microplastic particles in water samples, achieving high classification accuracy and demonstrating the potential for automated, high-throughput microplastic monitoring.
Microplastic Identification via Holographic Imaging and Machine Learning
Researchers combined holographic imaging with machine learning algorithms to automatically identify and classify microplastics in water samples, achieving accurate particle detection without manual microscopy. This automated approach could significantly speed up microplastic monitoring in environmental samples.
Holographic Classifier: Deep Learning in Digital Holography for Automatic Micro-objects Classification
Researchers developed a deep learning system using digital holography to automatically classify micro-objects such as microplastics and pollutant particles without manual image processing. The system achieved fast, accurate identification, offering a promising automated tool for environmental pollution monitoring.
Micro-Objects Classification for Microplastic Pollution Detection using Holographic Images
Researchers developed a machine learning system that uses holographic 3D images to automatically classify microplastics in water samples, distinguishing them from other microscopic particles with high precision. Current microplastic monitoring is slow and labor-intensive, so automated detection tools are essential for large-scale environmental surveillance. This approach could significantly speed up the monitoring of microplastic pollution in aquatic environments.
Digital holographic imaging and classification of microplastics using deep transfer learning
Researchers developed a digital holographic imaging system combined with deep learning to automatically classify and analyze microplastic particles in water samples. Automated imaging and AI-based identification could significantly speed up and standardize microplastic monitoring, reducing the labor-intensive manual counting currently required.
Deep Classification of Microplastics Through Image Fusion Techniques
Deep neural networks were applied to classify microplastic fibers captured via digital holography microscopy, using image fusion techniques on the Holography Micro-Plastic Dataset benchmark. The study demonstrated promising accuracy for distinguishing microplastics from other debris, advancing automated microplastic identification in water quality monitoring.
Microplastic pollution assessment with digital holography and zero-shot learning
Researchers developed a digital holography system combined with zero-shot machine learning to identify and characterize microplastics in environmental samples without requiring labeled training data, offering a promising automated tool for large-scale microplastic monitoring.
High-throughput microplastic assessment using polarization holographic imaging
Researchers built a portable, low-cost system that uses holographic imaging and polarized light combined with deep learning to automatically detect, count, and classify microplastics in water in real time — without lengthy sample preparation. This tool significantly speeds up microplastic monitoring and could be widely deployed for environmental surveillance.
Polarization Holographic Imaging for High-throughput Microplastic Analysis
Researchers developed a polarization holography system integrated with deep learning for high-throughput microplastic detection and analysis in aqueous environments. The system enables dynamic, real-time multimodal monitoring of microplastics by leveraging polarization contrast to distinguish particles in liquid samples.
Nanoplastics in Water: Artificial Intelligence-Assisted 4D Physicochemical Characterization and Rapid In Situ Detection
Researchers developed an artificial intelligence-powered holographic microscopy system that can detect and classify nanoplastics in water in real time, without any sample preparation. The technology identified particles as small as 135 nanometers and tracked their movement in three dimensions. This represents a significant advancement in environmental monitoring, as previous methods required extensive lab processing to detect plastic particles this small.
Intelligent Digital Holographic systems to counteract microplastic pollution in marine waters
Researchers developed a digital holography system capable of detecting and classifying microplastic particles in seawater in a label-free, high-throughput manner. The system can identify plastic particles that are otherwise invisible to the naked eye and can be adapted for use with microfluidic devices. This technology offers a faster and more compact alternative to traditional microscopy methods for marine microplastic monitoring.
Identification of Microplastics Based on the Fractal Properties of Their Holographic Fingerprint
Researchers developed an AI-enabled holographic imaging approach to identify microplastics in water using the fractal properties of their holographic fingerprints, offering a fast, label-free identification method.
Real-time microplastic detection using polarization digital holographic microscope
Researchers developed a real-time microplastic detection system using a polarization digital holographic microscope, enabling identification and characterization of MP particles in water based on their optical properties without the need for chemical staining or extensive sample preparation.
On the use of machine learning for microplastic identification from holographic phase-contrast signatures
This study applied machine learning to identify microplastic types from holographic phase-contrast imaging signatures, achieving rapid automated classification. Automated identification tools are important for scaling up microplastic monitoring in marine waters where manual identification is too slow and labor-intensive.
Digital holographic approaches to the detection and characterization of microplastics in water environments
This review examines advances in using digital holography as a high-throughput tool for detecting and characterizing microplastics in water. Researchers discuss both the hardware and software developments, including the growing role of artificial intelligence for classification tasks. The study highlights the emergence of field-portable holographic flow cytometers as a promising technology for real-time water monitoring of microplastic contamination.
Material analysis with polarization holography and machine learning
Researchers developed a polarization holographic imaging system combined with machine learning to identify different materials, demonstrating the approach on microplastic identification. This novel optical method could become a fast, non-destructive tool for classifying microplastics in environmental samples.
Polarization digital holography for advanced classification of microplastic particles
Researchers developed a polarization digital holography approach for classifying microplastic particles based on their optical birefringence properties, requiring minimal sample preparation. The non-destructive method can distinguish microplastics from biological material by detecting how particles alter light polarization states.
Towards cleaner waters: Advancing pollutant detection with artificial intelligence-assisted digital in-line holographic microscopy
This review examines how AI-assisted digital in-line holographic microscopy (DIHM) enables real-time detection of water pollutants including nano/microplastics, oil spills, and harmful algal blooms, comparing its capabilities against alternative detection techniques.
Holographic imaging and machine learning for microplastic size and shape analysis in water
Researchers used a portable holographic camera paired with deep-learning AI to rapidly measure the size and shape of microplastics floating in water, finding the lightweight MobileNetV2 model outperformed the larger ResNet101 in classification accuracy. The method offers a cost-effective, field-deployable tool for monitoring microplastics in drinking water at scale.