Optical/UV Flashcards

1
Q

Order of UV/IR

A

UV C, B, A
Visible
IR A, B, C

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2
Q

UV wavelengths

A

UV A 315 - 380/400nm
UV B 280 - 315nm
UV C 100 - 280nm

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3
Q

IR wavelengths

A

IR A 760/780 - 1400nm
IR B 1.4 - 3 μm
IR C 3μm - 1mm

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4
Q

Light delivery

A

Deliver light away from where it is generated - optical fires use total internal reflection. Low loss and high bandwidth.

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5
Q

How does a photodiode work

A

Converts incident light into electrical current. Creates electron hole pair that produces current. Si/Ge used to create photodiodes that detect in visible range.

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6
Q

PMTs

A

Good for low light levels but fragile and need stable power supply.

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7
Q

Thermopile

A

Converts thermal to electrical energy - output in response to temp.

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8
Q

Light interaction with tissues

A

Reflection
Absorption
Scattering
Fluorescence

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9
Q

Laser doppler flowmetry

A

Measure blood flow in tissue. Skin illuminated by coherent collimated laser beam. Reflected light collected, moving particles (RBCs) doppler shift light and can calculate speed and concentration of RBCs from this.

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10
Q

Laser Doppler Imaging

A

Use same principle as LDF but build up image. Used in assessment of burn depth.

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11
Q

Pulse oximetry

A

Wavelength of light affects how it is absorbed. Shine IR and visible through finger and see what is absorbed, difference based on amount of haemoglobin and oxygen. (Not necessarily suggesting not enough oxygen - miss CO poisoning as Hb still bounded to CO)

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12
Q

Tissue Oxygen Saturation

A

Use reflected or scattered light instead of absorbed. Uses visible light spectroscopy to quantify HbO2 in different depths of skin as white light reflected is split into components and converted to signal

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13
Q

Near IR Imaging

A

Light near IR on skin - IR camera can image this and display in visible spectrum. Can see deeper veins. Needs to be aligned perfectly and not real time image

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14
Q

Microscopy

A

Imaging on small scale using lenses and bright visible light Enhances characteristics such as staining. Look at capillaries in nail folds.

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15
Q

Optical Coherence tomography

A

Two beams of light have travelled same optical distance. Areas of sample reflecting a lot of light create greater interference - tells us about spatial dimensions and locations of structures.

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16
Q

Laser speckle contrast imaging

A

Closer representation of blood flow, directly measure movement at superficial depth of skin using laser light. Laser light passed through diffuser makes speckle pattern, contrast max if nothing moves - shows what is high and low movement.

17
Q

Uses of UV

A

Treatment of:
Psoriosis
Vitiligo
Polymorphic light eruption

18
Q

Effects of UV on skin, acute and delayed

A

Acute erythema (within hours): dilation of superficial blood vessels
Delayed tanning (2-7 days later): production and redistribution of melanin, thickening of skin

19
Q

How to measure UV

A

Thermopile - not very sensitive but uniform response
Photodiode - more sensitive but non-uniform

20
Q

Which UV more readily creates erythema

A

UVB

21
Q

Radial exposure (or dose) calculation

A

effective irradience x time

22
Q

Why does UV treat psoriasis

A

UV selectively kills cells that cause the condition. Action spectra 300-320nm - UVB, direct action causing apoptosis.
UVA - indirect action which has mutagenic effect

23
Q

Hazards of UV for skin and eyes

A

Skin: sunburn, skin cancer, aging
Eyes: acute - snow blindness
Chronic - cataracts

24
Q

What are the three types of effect of UV

A

Photo-electrical
Photo-chemical
Thermal

25
Q

What needs to be in place if an exposure limit may be exceeded?

A

Risk assessment
Local rules
UV radiation protection supervisor
Access control
PPE
Training
Audit

26
Q

What are limits for artificial sources of UV and UVA

A

Artificial 30J/m^2 over 8 hours
UVA 10000J/m^2 over 8 hours