Miniaturized fiber optic ultrasound sensor with multiplexing for photoacoustic imaging

Photoacoustics. 2022 Oct 25:28:100421. doi: 10.1016/j.pacs.2022.100421. eCollection 2022 Dec.

Abstract

A miniaturized ultrasound sensor based on optical fiber is designed and realized for multichannel parallel ultrasound detection and photoacoustic imaging. The fiber optic sensor is composed of a polymer coating, a reflective mirror and a single-mode optical fiber, with only 125 µm in diameter. By integrating the coherent demodulation technology and multiplexing technology, which using a relatively cheap fixed wavelength laser, hundreds of sensors could work simultaneously. Meanwhile, highly sensitive ultrasound detection has been demonstrated with the noise equivalent pressure as low as 0.46 kPa and the sensor exhibits a nearly omnidirectional directivity. Furthermore, a photoacoustic imaging system based on three sensors working in parallel is demonstrated. High lateral resolutions of 165-217 µm and axial resolutions of 112-131 µm over a depth range of larger than 5 mm are obtained. A three-dimensional phantom imaging experiment is also demonstrated. Benefited from parallel detection, the imaging speed is three times faster than that of a single sensor. The miniaturized fiber optic ultrasound sensor probe provides a competitive alternative for mechanically scanning-free endoscopic imaging, which is beneficial from small size, omnidirectional directivity and parallel detection capability.

Keywords: Coherent demodulation; Optical fiber; Parallel detection; Photoacoustic imaging; Ultrasound sensor.