Phase Contrast Imaging with Coded Apertures Using Laboratory-Based X-ray Sources
Author(s) -
Konstantin Ignatyev,
Peter R. T. Munro,
R.D. Speller,
Alessandro Olivo,
Ian McNulty,
Catherine Eyberger,
Barry Lai
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.3625352
Subject(s) - coded aperture , phase contrast imaging , optics , detector , x ray phase contrast imaging , aperture (computer memory) , synchrotron , contrast (vision) , coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , phase (matter) , wavefront , physics , pixel , absorption (acoustics) , phase contrast microscopy , materials science , acoustics , quantum mechanics
X‐ray phase contrast imaging is a powerful technique that allows detection of changes in the phase of x‐ray wavefronts as they pass through a sample. As a result, details not visible in conventional x‐ray absorption imaging can be detected. Until recently the majority of applications of phase contrast imaging were at synchrotron facilities due to the availability of their high flux and coherence; however, a number of techniques have appeared recently that allow phase contrast imaging to be performed using laboratory sources. Here we describe a phase contrast imaging technique, developed at University College London, that uses two coded apertures. The x‐ray beam is shaped by the pre‐sample aperture, and small deviations in the x‐ray propagation direction are detected with the help of the detector aperture. In contrast with other methods, it has a much more relaxed requirement for the source size (it works with source sizes up to 100 μm). A working prototype coded‐aperture system has been built. An x‐ray detector with directly deposited columnar CsI has been used to minimize signal spill‐over into neighboring pixels. Phase contrast images obtained with the system have demonstrated its effectiveness for imaging low‐absorption materials.
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