Abstract
Understanding scattering insensitiveness in diffuse reflectance
spectroscopy (DRS) will be useful to enhancing the spectral
specificity to absorption. In DRS based on
center-illuminated-area-detection (CIAD), the scattering response can
saturate as the relative strength of scattering with respect to the
collection size, represented by a dimensionless reduced scattering,
increases over a threshold. However, the formation of saturation
versus the same range of dimensionless reduced scattering may differ
between a fixed reduced scattering over an increasing collection size
(case 1) and an increasing reduced scattering over a fixed collection
size (case 2), due to the absorption. Part III demonstrates the
differences of the scattering saturation as well as the effect of
absorption on it in the CIAD geometry between the two cases while
assessed over the same range of the dimensionless reduced scattering.
A model allows predicting the absorption-dependent levels of
saturation and the corner parameters of saturation transition. When
assessed for the absorption coefficient to vary over [0.001,0.01,0.1,1]mm−1, the model-predicted levels of
saturation agree with MC results with ≤2.2% error in both cases. In comparison,
the model-predicted corner parameters of saturation show much
different agreement with MC results in the two cases, suggesting that
the saturation pattern is much better formed in one than in the other.
Experiments conforming to the CIAD geometry support the discrepancy of
the saturating patterns between the two cases.
Funder
National Institute of Food and
Agriculture