a Er:YAG laser. Second, a conventional surgical
Er:YAG laser is used in combination with LIBS ana-
lysis for contaminated and dry fat and muscle tissue.
3 MATERIALS AND METHODS
3.1 Single-pulse LIBS
Figure 1 shows a schematic overview of the setup
used for single-pulse. The experimental setup essen-
tially consists of three major components and sev-
eral auxiliary devices. The centerpiece is a Nd:YAG
(532 nm) laser whose laser beam is focused onto the
tissue samples. Light signals from the LIBS plasma
are collected using an array of convex lenses and
an optical fiber cable that is connected to a spectro-
meter for detecting and analyzing the signals. The
array of convex lenses for LIBS signal collection
is focused onto the tissue surface and aligned with
the laser focus. For signal transport to the spectro-
meter a multimode UV grade fiber cable was used.
Spectral analysis is performed with an Echelle spec-
trograph (Andor Mechelle 5000) of resolving power
λ
∆λ
= 6000. The tissue samples were placed in a petri
dish that was put on a XYZ-translation stage to be
able to move around the sample in 3D.
Figure 1: Optical setup for single-pulse LIBS.
3.2 Double-pulse LIBS
An adjusted setup is implemented for LIBS experi-
ments following a laser pulse of a surgical Er:YAG
laser (2.94 µm, Glissando, WaveLight(T M)), Erlan-
gen, Germany). The Nd:YAG laser in the single-pulse
experiments was used. The Er:YAG laser is operated
at a repetition rate of 10 Hz with a pulse duration of
350 µs and a pulse energy of 200 mJ. To use it for
LIBS experiments in this study, the laser head is fixed
steady next to the moving stage and directed onto the
tissue sample in a 45
◦
angle. The Er:YAG laser’s fo-
cus lies slightly above the sample surface. Moreover,
it is aligned with the focus of the Nd:YAG laser to
ensure that both lasers hit the same area on the tissue
surface for one measurement. In order to synchron-
ize the two lasers, a pulse detector for infrared light
(DoroTek Lab Bench Detector, 2 − 12µm) is used to
detect the reflected light of the Er:YAG laser beam in-
cident on the sample’s surface. Similarly to the first
setup, this signal is then used to trigger the pulse gen-
erator. Subsequently, the pulse generator triggers the
Nd:YAG laser with a temporal delay of 100 µs. This
delay combined with an internal processing delay of
approximately 300 µs from flashlamp triggering to Q-
switch activation, ensures that the Nd:YAG laser al-
ways fires after the Er:YAG laser’s pulse has ceased.
3.3 Sample Preparation and Data
Analysis
Fat and muscle tissue samples were extracted from
bisected ex-vivo pig heads at the Department of Oral
and Maxillofacial Surgery University Hospital Erlan-
gen. Using a knife, the tissues were cut into nearly
rectangular pieces of about 5 − 8 mm thickness for
LIBS measurements.
An isotonic saline solution (9 g NaCl per liter) is used
to create a thin liquid layer on the tissue surface to
partly mimic a layer of body fluids present at in-vivo
conditions, for example, during general surgery. Us-
ing a small medical syringe, a few droplets of sa-
line solution are applied onto the tissue surface to be
able to spread the liquid in such a manner to establish
a consistent liquid layer thickness of approximately
20 − 30µm (measured by OCT) that stays steady over
the course of the double-pulse LIBS experiments.
For the LIBS experiments, 6 tissue samples of each,
muscle and fat tissue, are measured in both LIBS
setups. Each tissue sample is measured 100 times,
where one half of the measurement set is obtained
under dry conditions and the other one with a sa-
line solution. Therefore, 600 LIBS measurements are
taken in each of the experimental setups.
The experimental data obtained from LIBS measure-
ments of the tissue samples is subsequently prepared
to undergo different statistical analysis techniques to
investigate the effect of the saline solution and the
cleaning effect of the surgical laser. Here, statistical
analysis is performed to observe the similarity and
differences among the tissues investigated under dif-
ferent conditions. As a first step, Principal Compon-
ent Analysis (PCA) is used to reduce the high dimen-
sionality of the data before Linear Discriminant Ana-
lysis (LDA) is performed on the data to classify each
PHOTOPTICS 2018 - 6th International Conference on Photonics, Optics and Laser Technology
248