scholarly journals Material-separating regularizer for multi-energy X-ray tomography

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacek Gondzio ◽  
Matti Lassas ◽  
Salla-Maaria Latva-Äijö ◽  
Samuli Siltanen ◽  
Filippo Zanetti

Abstract Dual-energy X-ray tomography is considered in a context where the target under imaging consists of two distinct materials. The materials are assumed to be possibly intertwined in space, but at any given location there is only one material present. Further, two X-ray energies are chosen so that there is a clear difference in the spectral dependence of the attenuation coefficients of the two materials. A novel regularizer is presented for the inverse problem of reconstructing separate tomographic images for the two materials. A combination of two things, (a) non-negativity constraint, and (b) penalty term containing the inner product between the two material images, promotes the presence of at most one material in a given pixel. A preconditioned interior point method is derived for the minimization of the regularization functional. Numerical tests with digital phantoms suggest that the new algorithm outperforms the baseline method, Joint Total Variation regularization, in terms of correctly material-characterized pixels. While the method is tested only in a two-dimensional setting with two materials and two energies, the approach readily generalizes to three dimensions and more materials. The number of materials just needs to match the number of energies used in imaging.

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathias Nehler ◽  
Ferdinand Stoeckhert ◽  
Anne Oelker ◽  
Jörg Renner ◽  
Erik Saenger

Abstract. We compare experimentally determined porosity with values derived from X-ray tomography for a suite of eight sandstone varieties covering a porosity range from about 3 to 25 %. In addition, we performed conventional stereological analysis of SEM images and examined thin sections. We investigated the sensitivity of segmentation, the conversion of the tomographic gray-value images representing the obtained X-ray attenuation coefficients into binary images, to (a) resolution of the digital images, (b) denoising filters, and (c) seven thresholding methods. Images of sandstones with porosities of 15 to 25 % exhibit a bimodal intensity distribution of the attenuation coefficients, enabling unambiguous segmentation that gives porosity values closely matching the laboratory values. For samples with lower porosities, pores and grains do not separate well in the skewed unimodal intensity histograms. For these samples, all tested thresholding methods tend to miscalculate porosity significantly. In addition to absolute porosity, the ratio between pore size and resolution, and mineralogical composition of the rocks affect the biases of the global segmentation methods.


2003 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 577 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.H. Arns ◽  
A. Sakellariou ◽  
T.J. Senden ◽  
A.P. Sheppard ◽  
R.M. Sok ◽  
...  

A micro-CT facility for imaging, visualising and modelling sedimentary rock properties in three dimensions (3D) is described. The facility is capable of acquiring 3D X-ray CT images of full-diameter cores and core plugs at up to 2,0003 voxels with resolutions down to 2μm. This allows the 3D pore-space of a rock to be imaged and, with the aid of SEM, to identify regions of different mineralogy. Computational results are presented which demonstrate that accurate predictions of petrophysical properties can be made directly from the digitised tomographic images. Computations of both formation factor and permeability from micro-tomographic images of Fontainebleau sandstone are shown to be in excellent agreement with experimental measurements over a wide range of porosities. Computed elastic properties for dry and water-saturated conditions are shown to be consistent with the exact Gassmann’s equations and are in excellent agreement with experimental measurements. Experimental measurements of Vp/Vs ratio for cemented sandstone morphologies are very noisy and cannot be used to infer relationships between elastic properties, mineralogy and rock microstructure. Computations on tomographic images show that the Vp/Vs ratio exhibits predictable limiting behavior which holds for any number of solid phases and is insensitive to the manner in which the phases are distributed. This allows the development of more accurate empirical methods for deriving the full velocity-porosity relationship for cemented sands. The results demonstrate the feasibility of combining digitised images with numerical calculations to accurately predict petrophysical properties of individual rock morphologies.


Symmetry ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 885
Author(s):  
Vasile Berinde ◽  
Cristina Ţicală

The aim of this paper is to show analytically and empirically how ant-based algorithms for medical image edge detection can be enhanced by using an admissible perturbation of demicontractive operators. We thus complement the results reported in a recent paper by the second author and her collaborators, where they used admissible perturbations of demicontractive mappings as test functions. To illustrate this fact, we first consider some typical properties of demicontractive mappings and of their admissible perturbations and then present some appropriate numerical tests to illustrate the improvement brought by the admissible perturbations of demicontractive mappings when they are taken as test functions in ant-based algorithms for medical image edge detection. The edge detection process reported in our study considers both symmetric (Head CT and Brain CT) and asymmetric (Hand X-ray) medical images. The performance of the algorithm was tested visually with various images and empirically with evaluation of parameters.


2019 ◽  
Vol 336 ◽  
pp. 169-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amélie Rochet ◽  
Ana Flávia Suzana ◽  
Aline R. Passos ◽  
Tiago Kalile ◽  
Felisa Berenguer ◽  
...  

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