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Published November 20, 2017 | Accepted Version + Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Focusing light inside scattering media with magnetic-particle-guided wavefront shaping

Abstract

Optical scattering has traditionally limited the ability to focus light inside scattering media such as biological tissue. Recently developed wavefront shaping techniques promise to overcome this limit by tailoring an optical wavefront to constructively interfere at a target location deep inside scattering media. To find such a wavefront solution, a "guidestar" mechanism is required to identify the target location. However, developing guidestars of practical usefulness is challenging, especially in biological tissue, which hinders the translation of wavefront shaping techniques. Here, we demonstrate a guidestar mechanism that relies on magnetic modulation of small particles. This guidestar method features an optical modulation efficiency of 29% and enables micrometer-scale focusing inside biological tissue with a peak intensity-to-background ratio (PBR) of 140; both numbers are one order of magnitude higher than those achieved with the ultrasound guidestar, a popular guidestar method. We also demonstrate that light can be focused on cells labeled with magnetic particles, and to different target locations by magnetically controlling the position of a particle. Since magnetic fields have a large penetration depth even through bone structures like the skull, this optical focusing method holds great promise for deep-tissue applications such as optogenetic modulation of neurons, targeted light-based therapy, and imaging.

Additional Information

© 2017 Optical Society of America. Received 21 August 2017; revised 27 September 2017; accepted 28 September 2017 (Doc. ID 305214); published 25 October 2017. Funding: National Institutes of Health (NIH) (F31EB021153, U01NS090577); GIST-Caltech Collaborative Research Proposal (CG2016); Donna and Benjamin M. Rosen Bioengineering Center; Israel-City of Hope Fellowship Program in Biomedical Research. The authors would like to thank Dr. Euiheon Chung, Dr. Mooseok Jang, Dr. Ethan White, Dr. Kathleen Elison, Dr. Mikhail Shapiro, Dr. George Lu, and Mr. Hunter Davis for assistance and helpful discussions. TEM imaging was conducted at the Electron Microscopy core at City of Hope with Marcia Millier, Zhuo Li and Ricardo Zerda.

Attached Files

Published - optica-4-11-1337.pdf

Accepted Version - nihms926729.pdf

Supplemental Material - 3081181.pdf

Supplemental Material - SuppVideo1_MagBeads25Hz.avi

Supplemental Material - SuppVideo2_MagBeads5Hz.avi

Supplemental Material - SuppVideo3_Cell25Hz.avi

Supplemental Material - SuppVideo4_Cell5Hz.avi

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023