4.6 Article

Accurate and fast modeling of scattering from random arrays of nanoparticles using the discrete dipole approximation and angular spectrum method

期刊

OPTICS EXPRESS
卷 29, 期 14, 页码 22761-22777

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OPTICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1364/OE.431754

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  1. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1807590]

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The study evaluates the accuracy of the scalar angular spectrum method when combined with different light-matter interaction models for computing far-field light scattered by random arrays of nanoparticles. It finds that the most accurate model depends on the nanoparticle material and packing density.
Lens-free microscopes can utilize holographic reconstruction techniques to recover the image of an object from the digitally recorded superposition of an unperturbed plane wave and a wave scattered by the object. Image reconstruction most commonly relies on the scalar angular spectrum method (ASM). While fast, the scalar ASM can be inaccurate for nanoscale objects, either because of the scalar approximation, or more generally, because it only models field propagation and not light-matter interaction, including inter-particle coupling. Here we evaluate the accuracy of the scalar ASM when combined with three different light-matter interaction models for computing the far-field light scattered by random arrays of gold and polystyrene nanoparticles. Among the three models-a dipole-matched transmission model, an optical path length model, and a binary amplitude model-we find that which model is most accurate depends on the nanoparticle material and packing density. For polystyrene particles at any packing density, there is always at least one model with error below 20%, while for gold nanoparticles with 40% or 50% surface coverage, there are no models that can provide errors better than 30%. The ASM error is determined in comparison to a discrete dipole approximation model, which is more computationally efficient than other full-wave modeling techniques. The knowledge of when and how the ASM fails can serve as a first step toward improved resolution in lens-free reconstruction and can also be applied to other random nanoparticle array applications such as lens-based super-resolution imaging, sub-diffraction beam focusing, and biomolecular sensing. (C) 2021 Optical Society of America under the terms of the OSA Open Access Publishing Agreement

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