Computer simulations of X-ray phase-contrast images and microtomographic observation of tubules in dentin

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Abstract

An investigation of the problems of X-ray imaging of dentinal tubules is presented. Two main points are addressed. In the first part of this paper, the problem of computer simulating tubule images recorded in a coherent synchrotron radiation (SR) beam has been discussed. A phantom material which involved a two-dimensional lattice of the tubules with parameters similar to those of dentin was considered. By a comparative examination of two approximations, it was found that the method of phase-contrast imaging is valid if the number of tubules along the beam is less than 100. Calculated images from a lattice of 50×50 tubules are periodic in free space but depend strongly on the distance between the specimen and the detector. In the second part, SR microtomographic experiments with millimetre-sized dentin samples in a partially coherent beam have been described. Tomograms were reconstructed from experimental projections using a technique for incoherent radiation. The main result of this part is the three-dimensional rendering of the directions of the tubules in a volume of the samples. Generation of the directions is possible because a tomogram shows the positions of the tubules. However, a detailed tubule cross-section structure cannot be restored.

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Argunova, T. S., Kohn, V. G., Lim, J. H., Gudkina, Z. V., & Nazarova, E. D. (2020). Computer simulations of X-ray phase-contrast images and microtomographic observation of tubules in dentin. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation, 27, 462–467. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577519016503

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