Terahertz hyperspectral imaging with dual chip-scale combs
Author(s)
Yang, Yang; Burghoff, David Patrick; Hu, Qing
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Hyperspectral imaging is a spectroscopic imaging technique that allows for the creation of images with pixels containing information from multiple spectral bands. At terahertz wavelengths, it has emerged as a prominent tool for a number of applications, ranging from nonionizing cancer diagnosis and pharmaceutical characterization to nondestructive artifact testing. Contemporary terahertz imaging systems typically rely on nonlinear optical downconversion of a fiber-based near-infrared femtosecond laser, requiring complex optical systems. Here, we demonstrate hyperspectral imaging with chip-scale frequency combs based on terahertz quantum cascade lasers. The dual combs are freerunning and emit coherent terahertz radiation that covers a bandwidth of 220 GHz at 3.4 THz with ~10 µW per line. The combination of the fast acquisition rate of dual-comb spectroscopy with the monolithic design, scalability, and chip-scale size of the combs is highly appealing for future imaging applications in biomedicine and the pharmaceutical industry.
Date issued
2019-05Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Research Laboratory of ElectronicsJournal
Optica
Publisher
Optical Society of America (OSA)
Citation
Sterczewski, Lukasz A. et al. “Terahertz hyperspectral imaging with dual chip-scale combs.” Optica 6, 6 (May 2019): 766-771 © 2019 The Author(s)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2334-2536