In recent times, there has been a drive to develop nondestructive X-ray imaging techniques that provide chemical or physical insight. To date, these methods have generally been limited; either requiring raster scanning of pencil beams, using narrow bandwidth radiation and/or limited to small samples. We have developed a novel full-field radiographic imaging technique that enables the entire physiochemical state of an object to be imaged in a single snapshot. The method is sensitive to emitted and scattered radiation, using a spectral imaging detector and polychromatic hard X-radiation, making it particularly useful for studying large dense samples for materials science and engineering applications. The method and its extension to three-dimensional imaging is validated with a series of test objects and demonstrated to directly image the crystallographic preferred orientation and formed precipitates across an aluminium alloy friction stir weld section. © 2014 The Author(s) Published by the Royal Society.
CITATION STYLE
Egan, C. K., Jacques, S. D. M., Connolley, T., Wilson, M. D., Veale, M. C., Seller, P., & Cernik, R. J. (2014). Dark-field hyperspectral X-ray imaging. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 470(2165). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2013.0629
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