The inherent problem of transflection-mode infrared spectroscopic microscopy and the ramifications for biomedical single point and imaging applications.
Journal article, 2013

Transflection-mode FTIR spectroscopy has become a popular method of measuring spectra from biomedical and other samples due to the relative low cost of substrates compared to transmission windows, and a higher absorbance due to a double pass through the same sample approximately doubling the effective path length. In this publication we state an optical description of samples on multilayer low-e reflective substrates. Using this model we are able to explain in detail the so-called electric-field standing wave effect and rationalise the non-linear change in absorbance with sample thickness. The ramifications of this non-linear change, for imaging and classification systems, where a model is built from tissue sectioned at a particular thickness and compared with tissue of a different thickness are discussed. We show that spectra can be distorted such that classification fails leading to inaccurate tissue segmentation which may have subsequent implications for disease diagnostics applications.

Author

Paul Bassan

Joe Lee

Ashwin Sachdeva

Juliana Pissardini

Konrad M Dorling

John Fletcher

University of Gothenburg

Alex Henderson

Peter Gardner

The Analyst

0003-2654 (ISSN) 1364-5528 (eISSN)

Vol. 138 1 144-57

Subject Categories

Analytical Chemistry

DOI

10.1039/c2an36090j

PubMed

23099638

More information

Created

10/10/2017