Low-coherence interferometry is combined with confocal scanning to provide remote refractive index and thickness measurements of transparent materials. The influence of lens aberrations in the confocal measurement is assessed through investigation of the axial point-spread functions (APSFs) generated using optical configurations comprised of paired aspherics and paired achromats. Off-axis parabolic mirrors are suggested as an alternative to lenses and are shown to exhibit much more symmetric APSFs provided the system numerical aperture is not too high. Refractive index and thickness measurements are made with each configuration with most mirror pairings offering better than twice the repeatability and accuracy of either lens pairing.
A novel dual beam Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT) system is presented for microfluidics applications. The dual sensing-light-sheet approach presented here achieves high velocity flow measurement because the rapid re-imaging by the second sensing-light-sheet allows for particle tracking between each image-frame of the pair. We have demonstrated measurements of microchannel flow using 10 μm particles in a 700 μm deep channel with peak velocities of approximately 0.28 metres-per-second (m/s), approximately two orders of magnitude higher than previously reported OCT systems operating at a few millimeters-per-second.
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