Phase contrast imaging with coded apertures using laboratory-based X-ray sources

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Abstract

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. © 2011 American Institute of Physics.

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APA

Ignatyev, K., Munro, P. R. T., Speller, R. D., & Olivo, A. (2010). Phase contrast imaging with coded apertures using laboratory-based X-ray sources. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1365, pp. 254–257). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3625352

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