Reconstructing Three-Dimensional Optical Anisotropy with Tomographic Müller-Polarimetric Microscopy
Journal article, 2025

Most visible light imaging methods using polarization to obtain ultrastructure information are limited to 2D analysis or require demanding phase measurements to be extended to 3D. A novel 3D polarized light imaging technique based on Müller-matrix formulations is introduced which numerically reconstructs 3D optical birefringence, that is anisotropic refractive indices and optical axis orientation, in each volumetric unit of sample. The new method is demonstrated, tomographic Müller-polarimetric microscopy, in simulation and using experimental data of 3D macroscopic sample of human trabecular bone sample, where the local main orientation of nanoscale collagen fibers is extracted with a resolution of ≈ 20 µm. Tomographic Müller-polarimetric microscopy offers a low-cost and experimentally simple imaging approach to access the ultrastructure which is not directly resolvable, in a wide range of biological and composite materials.

human trabecular bone

reconstruction

tomographic polarized light microscopy

bio-imaging

3D ultrastructure

Author

Yang Chen

University of the West of Scotland

Paul Scherrer Institut

Arthur Baroni

Paul Scherrer Institut

Torne Tänzer

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Paul Scherrer Institut

Leonard Nielsen

Chalmers, Physics, E-commons

Marianne Liebi

Paul Scherrer Institut

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Physics

Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL)

Advanced Science

2198-3844 (ISSN) 21983844 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

DOI

10.1002/advs.202502075

More information

Latest update

5/21/2025