3 research outputs found

    Identification of corneal mechanical properties using optical tomography and digital volume correlation

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    This work presents an effective methodology for measuring the depth-resolved 3D full-field deformation of semitransparent, light scattering soft tissues such as vertebrate eye cornea. This was obtained by performing digital volume correlation on optical coherence tomography volume reconstructions of silicone rubber phantoms and porcine cornea samples. Both the strip tensile tests and the posterior inflation tests have been studied. Prior to these tests, noise effect and strain induced speckle decorrelation were first studied using experimental and simulation methods. The interpolation bias in the strain results has also been analyzed. Two effective approaches have been introduced to reduce the interpolation bias. To extract material constitutive parameters from the 3D full-field deformation measurements, the virtual fields method has been extended into 3D. Both manually defined virtual fields and the optimized piecewise virtual fields have been developed and compared with each other. Efforts have also been made in developing a method to correct the refraction induced distortions in the optical coherence tomography reconstructions. Tilt tests of different silicone rubber phantoms have been implemented to evaluate the performance of the refraction correction method in correcting the distorted reconstructions

    Correction of refraction induced distortion in optical coherence tomography corneal reconstructions for volume deformation measurements

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    In this project, the depth-resolved full-field deformation of the porcine cornea under changing intraocular pressure was investigated by performing digital volume correlation (DVC) on the reconstructed volume images generated through swept source optical coherence tomography (SS-OCT). Posterior inflation test of porcine cornea sample for two load steps were performed and the distribution patterns of displacement and strain fields were produced. The error sources for the measurements were analyzed. The refraction induced OCT image distortion is a main error source for the measurement results. Then, a methodology was developed to correct the OCT distortion based on the Fermat’s principle

    Depth-resolved full-field measurement of corneal deformation by optical coherence tomography and digital volume correlation

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    The study of vertebrate eye cornea is an interdisciplinary subject and the research on its mechanical properties has significant importance in ophthalmology. The measurement of depth-resolved 3D full-field deformation behaviour of cornea under changing intraocular pressure is a useful method to study the local corneal mechanical properties. In this work, optical coherence tomography was adopted to reconstruct the internal structure of a porcine cornea inflated from 15 to 18.75 mmHg (close to the physical porcine intraocular pressure) in the form of 3D image sequences. An effective method has been developed to correct the commonly seen refraction induced distortions in the optical coherence tomography reconstructions, based on Fermat’s principle. The 3D deformation field was then determined by performing digital volume correlation on these corrected 3D reconstructions. A simple finite element model of the inflation test was developed and the predicted values were compared against digital volume correlation results, showing good overall agreement
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