论文标题
双能X射线暗场材料分解
Dual-energy X-ray dark-field material decomposition
论文作者
论文摘要
双能量成像是一种临床上良好的技术,比常规X射线成像具有多个优点。通过使用两个不同的X射线光谱进行测量,可以利用能量依赖性衰减的差异以获得特定于材料的信息。此信息用于各种成像应用中,以改善临床诊断。近年来,基于光栅的X射线暗场成像在成像群落中引起了越来越多的关注。 X射线暗场信号起源于物体内的超小角度散射,因此提供了有关成像系统空间分辨率以下的微观结构的信息。该属性导致了当前正在研究的许多有希望的未来成像应用程序。但是,由于检测到的暗场信号仅代表超小角度散射的总量,因此几乎无法使用当前X射线暗视场技术来区分不同的微观结构。为了克服这些局限性,我们提出了一个新颖的概念,称为双能X射线暗场材料分解,它将基本材料分解方法从基于衰减的双能量成像到暗场成像方式。我们开发了一种物理模型和算法,用于双能黑体材料分解,并在实验测量中评估拟议的概念。我们的结果表明,通过用两个不同的X射线光谱对能量依赖性的暗场信号进行采样,可以将分解为两种不同的微结构材料。与双能量成像相似,其他微结构特异性信息可能对临床诊断有用。
Dual-energy imaging is a clinically well-established technique that offers several advantages over conventional X-ray imaging. By performing measurements with two distinct X-ray spectra, differences in energy-dependent attenuation are exploited to obtain material-specific information. This information is used in various imaging applications to improve clinical diagnosis. In recent years, grating-based X-ray dark-field imaging has received increasing attention in the imaging community. The X-ray dark-field signal originates from ultra small-angle scattering within an object and thus provides information about the microstructure far below the spatial resolution of the imaging system. This property has led to a number of promising future imaging applications that are currently being investigated. However, different microstructures can hardly be distinguished with current X-ray dark-field imaging techniques, since the detected dark-field signal only represents the total amount of ultra small-angle scattering. To overcome these limitations, we present a novel concept called dual-energy X-ray dark-field material decomposition, which transfers the basic material decomposition approach from attenuation-based dual-energy imaging to the dark-field imaging modality. We develop a physical model and algorithms for dual-energy dark-field material decomposition and evaluate the proposed concept in experimental measurements. Our results suggest that by sampling the energy-dependent dark-field signal with two different X-ray spectra, a decomposition into two different microstructured materials is possible. Similar to dual-energy imaging, the additional microstructure-specific information could be useful for clinical diagnosis.