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THz Active Imaging Systems With Real-Time Capabilities | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

THz Active Imaging Systems With Real-Time Capabilities


Abstract:

This paper presents a survey of the status of five active THz imaging modalities which we have developed and investigated during the last few years with the goal to explo...Show More

Abstract:

This paper presents a survey of the status of five active THz imaging modalities which we have developed and investigated during the last few years with the goal to explore their potential for real-time imaging. We start out by introducing a novel waveguide-based all-electronic imaging system which operates at 812 GHz. Its salient feature is a 32-pixel linear detector array heterodyne-operated at the eighth subharmonic. This array in combination with a telescope optics for object distances of 2-6 m reaches a data acquisition speed suited for real-time imaging. The second system described then is again an all-electronic scanner (now for around 300 GHz ), designed for object distances of ≥ 8 m , which combines mechanical scanning in vertical direction, synthetic-aperture image generation in horizontal direction, and frequency-modulated continuous-wave sweeping for the depth information. The third and fourth systems follow an optoelectronic approach by relying on several- to multi-pixel parallel electrooptic detection. One imager is based on a pulsed THz-OPO and homodyne detection with a CCD camera, the other on either continuous-wave electronic or femtosecond optoelectronic THz sources and a photonic-mixing device (PMD) camera. The article concludes with a description of the state of the art of imaging with focal-plane arrays based on CMOS field-effect transistors.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Terahertz Science and Technology ( Volume: 1, Issue: 1, September 2011)
Page(s): 183 - 200
Date of Publication: 29 August 2011

ISSN Information:


I. Introduction

Imaging with electromagnetic radiation in the THz frequency regime (whose lower bounds we understand here to be 300 GHz) has made considerable progress in recent years. THz imaging and sensing is being investigated and found to be promising for a plethora of applications, both in science and beyond, such as security and safety screening, process monitoring and non-contact materials testing, biological, medical and pharmaceutical analysis, etc. [1]–[11].

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