scholarly journals Proposals on 3D parallel edge-preserving filtration for x-ray tomographic digital images of porous medium core plugs

Author(s):  
S S Arsenyev-Obraztsov ◽  
E A Volkov ◽  
G O Plusch
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiwu Liao

Existing fractional-order Perona-Malik Diffusion (FOPMD) algorithms used in noise suppressing suffer from undesired artifacts and speckle effect, which hamper FOPMD used in low-dosed X-ray computed tomography (LDCT) imaging. In this paper, we propose a new FOPMD method for low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) imaging, which is called regularized fully spatial FOPMD (RFS-FOPMD), whose numerical scheme is also given based on Grünwald-Letnikov derivative (G-L derivative). Here, fully spatial FOPMD represents all the integer-order derivatives (IODs) in the right hand of Perona-Malik Diffusion (PMD) which are replaced by fractional-order derivatives (FODs). Since the new scheme has advantages of both regularization and FOPMD, it has good abilities in singularities preserving while suppressing noise. Some real sinogram of LDCT are used to compare the different performances not only for some classical but also for some state-of-art diffusion schemes. These schemes include PMD, regularized PMD (RPMD), and FOPMD in (Hu et al. 2012). Experimental results show that besides good ability in edge preserving, the new scheme also has good stability for iteration number and can avoid artifacts and speckle effect with suitable parameters.


1995 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
pp. 195-210
Author(s):  
A. C. Vermeulen ◽  
R. Delhez ◽  
Th.H. de Keijser ◽  
E. J. Mittemeijer

A method has heen developed to determine the dislocation configuration in a polycrystalline specimen from the direction dependence of line broadening. The method is based on an analytical expression for the integral breadth due to microstrain from sets of parallel edge and/or screw dislocations on the specific slip systems. Analysis of the x-ray-diffraction measurements obtained from poly crystalline aluminium layers, deposited onto silicon wafers and subsequently annealed and cooled to room temperature, shows unequal densities and unequal changes of densities of dislocations with the Burgers vector parallel and with the Burgers vector inclined with respect to the surface of the layer. Stress relaxation and dislocation annihilation occur at room temperature. A model was developed to describe the dependency of the decrease of macrostress on the decrease of the dislocation density.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-5
Author(s):  
Kholod Almanei ◽  
Rakan Alsulaimani ◽  
Sarah Alfadda ◽  
Sarah Albabtain ◽  
Reem Alsulaimani

Aim. To compare digital images of conventional radiographs with the original radiographs for perceived clarity of periapical lesions and the quality of root canal treatment. Materials and Methods. One hundred and four intraoral periapical radiographs of patients with endodontically treated teeth were randomly selected. The radiographs were digitized using an MD300 USB X-ray Reader. The digital images were transferred to an HP laptop. Three evaluators compared each conventional radiograph with the matching digital image. The images were ranked for clarity and assessed for diagnostic quality; data were analyzed using the Reliability Calculation “ReCal.” Results. Both the digital images and conventional films had comparable clarity and diagnostic quality. Results indicated a moderate agreement between the evaluators. Conclusions. Conventional radiographs digitized using an MD300 USB X-ray Reader have similar clarity and diagnostic quality in comparison to the original radiographs.


Author(s):  
Thiago Piazera de Carvalho ◽  
Hervé P. Morvan ◽  
David Hargreaves

In aero engines, the oil and air interaction within bearing chambers creates a complex two-phase flow. Since most aero engines use a close-loop oil system and releasing oil out is not acceptable, oil-air separation is essential. The oil originates from the engine transmission, the majority of which is scavenged out from the oil pump. The remainder exits via the air vents, where it goes to an air oil separator called a breather. In metal-foam-style breathers separation occurs by two physical processes. Firstly the largest droplets are centrifuged against the separator walls. Secondly, smaller droplets, which tend to follow the main air path, pass through the metal foam where they ideally should impact and coalesce on the material filaments and drift radially outwards, by the action of centrifugal forces. Although these devices have high separation efficiency, it is important to understand how these systems work to continue to improve separation and droplet capture. One approach to evaluate separation effectiveness is by means of Computational Fluid Dynamics. Numerical studies on breathers are quite scarce and have always employed simplified porous media approaches where a momentum sink is added into the momentum equations in order to account for the viscous and/or inertial losses due to the porous zone [1]. Furthermore, there have been no attempts that the authors know of to model the oil flow inside the porous medium of such devices. Normally, breathers employ a high porosity open-cell metal foam as the porous medium. The aim of this study is to perform a pore-level numerical simulation on a representative elementary volume (REV) of the metal foam with the purpose of determining its transport properties. The pore scale topology is represented firstly by an idealized geometry, namely the Weaire-Phelan cell [2]. The pressure drop and permeability are determined by the solution of the Navier-Stokes equations. Additionally, structural properties such as porosity, specific surface area and pore diameter are calculated. The same procedure is then applied to a 3D digital representation of a metallic foam sample generated by X-ray tomography scans [3]. Both geometries are compared against each other and experimental data for validation. Preliminary simulations with the X-ray scanned model have tended to under predict the pressure drop when compared to in-house experimental data. Additionally, the few existing studies on flow in metal foams have tended to consider laminar flow; this is not the case here and this also raises the question that Reynolds-averaged turbulence models might not be well suited to flows at such small scales, which this paper considers.


2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wim-Paul Breugem ◽  
Vincent van Dijk ◽  
René Delfos

Two different direct-forcing immersed boundary methods (IBMs) were applied for the purpose of simulating slow flow through a real porous medium: the volume penalization IBM and the stress IBM. The porous medium was a random close packing of about 9000 glass beads in a round tube. The packing geometry was determined from an X-ray computed tomography (CT) scan in terms of the distribution of the truncated solid volume fraction (either 0 or 1) on a three-dimensional Cartesian grid. The scan resolution corresponded to 19.3 grid cells over the mean bead diameter. A facility was built to experimentally determine the permeability of the packing. Numerical simulations were performed for the same packing based on the CT scan data. For both IBMs the numerically determined permeability based on the Richardson extrapolation was just 10% lower than the experimentally found value. As expected, at finite grid resolution the stress IBM appeared to be the most accurate IBM.


2020 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 03001
Author(s):  
Olivier Lopez ◽  
Souhail Youssef ◽  
Audrey Estublier ◽  
Jostein Alvestad ◽  
Christin Weierholt Strandli

The injection of a gas phase through a water saturated porous medium can reduce the water saturation not only by displacement mechanisms but also by evaporation mechanisms. In the presence of brine, this process can induce salt crystallization and precipitation within the porous medium with a risk of permeability alteration. In the field of gas production and storage, the occurrence of such a phenomenon can have detrimental consequence on the well productivity or injectivity. In this work, we investigated experimentally and numerically the effect of dry gas injection on salt precipitation and permeability impairment. State of the art equipment designed for high throughput coreflood experimentation was used to capture the dynamic of salt migration using X-Ray radiography. A set of experiments have been conducted on a sample of Bentheimer sandstone (10mm in diameter and 20 mm in length) as well as a two layers composite sample with a significant permeability contrast. Experiments were conducted using Nitrogen and KBr brine with different boundary conditions (i.e. with and without capillary contact). Results showed that salt precipitation results from the interplay of different parameters, namely pressure gradient, brine salinity, capillary forces and vapor partial pressure. Experimental observations indicate that in the case of dry gas injection, salt systematically precipitates but permeability alteration is observed only if a capillary contact is maintained with the brine. We built a 2D flow model integrating two-phase Darcy flow, capillary forces, salt effect on vapor partial pressure, dissolved salt transport, as well as the different PVT equilibria needed to describe properly the systems. Once calibrated, the model showed good predictability of lab scale experiment and thus can be used for parametrical study and upscaled to the well bore scale.


Water ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 1329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suiyi Zhu ◽  
Junna Zhu ◽  
Wei Fan ◽  
Yang Yu ◽  
Jiakuan Yang ◽  
...  

When reclaimed water was recharged into groundwater containing a low content of ferrous iron, Fe-rich particles were generated and started to transport into the porous medium. X-ray powder diffraction and Mössbauer spectroscopy analysis showed that the generated Fe-rich particles were in a poorly crystallized ferrihydrite phase. After the formation of ferrihydrite particles, the mass loss of contaminants was calculated, which was 88.2% for Al, 93.3% for Zn, and 41.6% for chemical oxygen demand (COD). Protein-like compounds were predominant in the removed COD. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) was used as a model to investigate the effect of proteins on the transport of ferrihydrite particles in porous medium. Results showed that the attachment efficiency of ferrihydrite particles on the porous medium decreased from 100% to 75% with the increase of BSA concentration from 10 mg/L to 100 mg/L. BSA was attached to the surface of ferrihydrite particles via electrostatic adsorption. Thus, the zeta potential of ferrihydrite particles changed from positive to negative, and the particles became less aggregated, thereby enhancing particle mobility. This observation provided evidence that protein residues in reclaimed water enhance the transport of Fe-rich particles in saturated porous medium.


2016 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 00.1-00 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R Levitt ◽  
Michael C Barbour ◽  
Sabine Rolland du Roscoat ◽  
Christian Geindreau ◽  
Venkat K Chivukula ◽  
...  

BackgroundComputational modeling of intracranial aneurysms provides insights into the influence of hemodynamics on aneurysm growth, rupture, and treatment outcome. Standard modeling of coiled aneurysms simplifies the complex geometry of the coil mass into a homogeneous porous medium that fills the aneurysmal sac. We compare hemodynamics of coiled aneurysms modeled from high-resolution imaging with those from the same aneurysms modeled following the standard technique, in an effort to characterize sources of error from the simplified model.MaterialsPhysical models of two unruptured aneurysms were created using three-dimensional printing. The models were treated with coil embolization using the same coils as those used in actual patient treatment and then scanned by synchrotron X-ray microtomography to obtain high-resolution imaging of the coil mass. Computational modeling of each aneurysm was performed using patient-specific boundary conditions. The coils were modeled using the simplified porous medium or by incorporating the X-ray imaged coil surface, and the differences in hemodynamic variables were assessed.ResultsX-ray microtomographic imaging of coils and incorporation into computational models were successful for both aneurysms. Porous medium calculations of coiled aneurysm hemodynamics overestimated intra-aneurysmal flow, underestimated oscillatory shear index and viscous dissipation, and over- or underpredicted wall shear stress (WSS) and WSS gradient compared with X-ray-based coiled computational fluid dynamics models.ConclusionsComputational modeling of coiled intracranial aneurysms using the porous medium approach may inaccurately estimate key hemodynamic variables compared with models incorporating high-resolution synchrotron X-ray microtomographic imaging of complex aneurysm coil geometry.


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