Abstract

.Significance: 2019 SPIE Photonics West conference hosted over 5000 presentations. Some important presentations in the Industrial Laser, Laser Source and Application (LASE) and Optoelectronics, Photonic Materials and Devices (OPTO) sections of the SPIE Photonics West conference have a risk of being overlooked by the biomedical community despite their implications for the field of biophotonics. We review some recent advances in the area of development coherent radiation sources in the infrared (IR), ultraviolet (UV), and terahertz (THz) regimes.Aim: Recent advances in coherent radiation sources in the IR, deep UV, and THz regimes were outlined, and the importance of each presentation to one or more promising biomedical applications was assessed.Approach: Presentations and proceedings from the LASE and OPTO sections were reviewed for inclusion. Emphasis was placed on talks from the Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials and Devices XVIII conference, and the Terahertz, RF, Millimeter, and Submillimeter-Wave Technology and Applications XII conference. Conference sections that directly focused on biomedical applications were excluded.Results: Enhanced IR supercontinuum generation with compact supercontinuum sources may allow for real-time biomarker detection and create new opportunities for imaging tissues using the third biological window (1600 to 1850 nm). Efficient methods to generate deep UV (200 to 260 nm) radiation allow for the study of biologically important molecules through techniques such as resonance Raman spectroscopy while avoiding fluorescence overlap. Likewise, novel and improved THz generation methods seek to bridge the “THz gap” that has previously limited biomedical applications.Conclusions: Advances in coherent radiation sources in the IR, UV, and THz regimes have created new opportunities for biomedical optics research.

Highlights

  • This review highlights the presentations in the Industrial Laser, Laser Source and Application (LASE) and Optoelectronics, Photonic Materials and Devices (OPTO) conferences hosted as part of the 2019 SPIE Photonics West symposium, outlines the impact of these advances to the biological sciences, and offers future biological applications for these techniques and materials.Journal of Biomedical OpticsApril 2020 Vol 25(4)Marble and Yakovlev: Biomedical optics applications of advanced lasers and nonlinear opticsThe 2019 SPIE Photonics West symposium, held in San Francisco, California, on February 2 to 7, hosted thousands of presentations spanning the fields of biophotonics, laser–tissue interaction, spectroscopy, nonlinear optical effects, laser design, and optoelectronic materials

  • Enhanced IR supercontinuum generation with compact supercontinuum sources may allow for real-time biomarker detection and create new opportunities for imaging tissues using the third biological window (1600 to 1850 nm)

  • Efficient methods to generate deep UV (200 to 260 nm) radiation allow for the study of biologically important molecules through techniques such as resonance Raman spectroscopy while avoiding fluorescence overlap

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Summary

Introduction

This review highlights the presentations in the Industrial Laser, Laser Source and Application (LASE) and Optoelectronics, Photonic Materials and Devices (OPTO) conferences hosted as part of the 2019 SPIE Photonics West symposium, outlines the impact of these advances to the biological sciences, and offers future biological applications for these techniques and materials.Journal of Biomedical OpticsApril 2020 Vol 25(4)Marble and Yakovlev: Biomedical optics applications of advanced lasers and nonlinear opticsThe 2019 SPIE Photonics West symposium, held in San Francisco, California, on February 2 to 7, hosted thousands of presentations spanning the fields of biophotonics, laser–tissue interaction, spectroscopy, nonlinear optical effects, laser design, and optoelectronic materials. To further understand the goals of laser technology development, we review and analyze presentations at the SPIE Photonics West conference and connect them to possible biomedical applications. In this attempt to provide an overview and highlight talks from the LASE and OPTO conferences, we focus on talks from conference sections that may have been overlooked by the biomedical community, such as the Nonlinear Frequency Generation and Conversion: Materials and Devices XVIII conference (52 talks, invited talks, and posters) and the Terahertz, RF, Millimeter, and Submillimeter-Wave Technology and Applications XII conference (74 talks, 10 invited talks, and 16 posters). We deliberately avoid LASE/OPTO conferences where talks were directly focused on biomedical applications, such as the Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics: Biomedical, Scientific, and Industrial Applications XIX conference, Microfluidics, BioMEMS, and Medical Microsystems conference, and Adaptive Optics and Wavefront Control for Biological Systems V conference

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