6533b7d0fe1ef96bd1259b87
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Poor optical stability of molecular dyes when used as absorbers in water-based tissue-simulating phantoms
Boštjan LikarFranjo PernušSunil Paul Matthew MenacheryBlaž CugmasBlaž CugmasPeter Nagličsubject
Materials sciencesurfactantturbid media02 engineering and technologymedicine.disease_cause01 natural sciencesIndia ink010309 opticsPulmonary surfactant0103 physical sciencesmedicinetissue-simulating phantomsmolecular dyesoptical spectroscopySpectroscopyAbsorption (electromagnetic radiation)Inkwell021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology3. Good healthDilutionoptical stabilityChemical engineering:NATURAL SCIENCES::Physics::Atomic and molecular physics [Research Subject Categories]Photocatalysis0210 nano-technologyUltravioletVisible spectrumdescription
Biomedical optical systems and models can be easily validated by the use of tissue-simulating phantoms. They can consist of water-based turbid media which often include inks (India ink and molecular dyes) as absorbers. Optical stability of commonly exploited inks under the influence of light, pH changes and the addition of TiO2 and surfactant, was studied. We found that the exposure to ultraviolet and visible light can crucially affect the absorption properties of molecular dyes. On average, absorption peaks decreased by 47.3% in 150 exposure hours. Furthermore, dilution can affect ink’s pH and by that, its decay rate under light exposure. When TiO2 was added to the phantoms, all molecular dyes decayed rapidly. Photocatalytic nature of TiO2 can be partially avoided by selecting TiO2 with surface and crystal structure modification. Surfactant, normally present in the phantoms with polystyrene spheres, can cause absorption peak shifts up to 20 nm and amplitude changes of 29.6%. Therefore, it is crucial to test the optical stability of inks in the presented manner before their exploitation in water-based phantoms.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-02-27 |