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An unambiguous derivation of the effective refractive index of biological suspensions and an extension to dense tissue such as blood

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posted on 2023-01-11, 21:50 authored by Alexander Nahmad-Rohen, Augusto García-Valenzuela
The van de Hulst formula provides an expression for the effective refractive index or effective propagation constant of a suspension of particles of arbitrary shape, size and refractive index in an optically homogeneous medium. However, its validity for biological matter, which often consists of very dense suspensions of cells, is unclear because existing derivations of the formula or similar results rely on far-field scattering and/or on the suspension in question being dilute. We present a derivation of the van de Hulst formula valid for suspensions of large, tenuous scatterers -- the type biological suspensions are typically made of -- which does not rely on these conditions, showing that they are not strictly necessary for the formula to be valid. We apply these results specifically to blood and epithelial tissue. Furthermore, we determine the true condition for the formula to be valid for these types of tissues. We finally provide a simple way to estimate -- and, more importantly, correct -- the error incurred by the van de Hulst formula when this condition is not met.

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