Enhancing Tabletop X-Ray Phase Contrast Imaging with Nano-Fabrication

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Abstract

X-ray phase-contrast imaging is a promising approach for improving soft-tissue contrast and lowering radiation dose in biomedical applications. While current tabletop imaging systems adapt to common x-ray tubes and large-area detectors by employing absorptive elements such as absorption gratings or monolithic crystals to filter the beam, we developed nanometric phase gratings which enable tabletop x-ray far-field interferometry with only phase-shifting elements, leading to a substantial enhancement in the performance of phase contrast imaging. In a general sense the method transfers the demands on the spatial coherence of the x-ray source and the detector resolution to the feature size of x-ray phase masks. We demonstrate its capabilities in hard x-ray imaging experiments at a fraction of clinical dose levels and present comparisons with the existing Talbot-Lau interferometer and with conventional digital radiography.

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Miao, H., Gomella, A. A., Harmon, K. J., Bennett, E. E., Chedid, N., Znati, S., … Wen, H. (2015). Enhancing Tabletop X-Ray Phase Contrast Imaging with Nano-Fabrication. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep13581

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