Abstract

Although the measurement of tooth quality is necessary for precise prediction of caries formation, typical measurement methods include tooth-hardness measurements and absorption spectroscopy, which generally use infrared light irradiation. These methods are destructive or invasive, and obtaining two-dimensional information in the oral cavity is difficult. Mid-infrared emissions from the surface of an object reflect intrinsic vibrations of molecules in the object. In this study, a mid-infrared passive spectroscopic imaging system was developed using an inexpensive uncooled microbolometer array sensor with an optimized multi-slit, which eliminated the cancellation of interference intensities between two adjacent emission points, to obtain two-dimensional information from an object without external infrared light irradiation. First, the feasibility of obtaining two-dimensional information on tooth quality using the proposed system was examined, and emission spectra attributed to phosphate ions in hydroxyapatite (HAp), the main component of enamel, were successfully obtained from bovine teeth. Further, the hardness of bovine teeth was measured, and a correlation (R2 = 0.8067) between the Vickers hardness and peak area ratio of phosphate ions assigned to the crystalline and amorphous phases of a tooth was established. Additionally, tooth-hardness visualization in a non-contact manner was demonstrated as two-dimensional information using the obtained regression equation.

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