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Abstract
We report the development of laboratory based hyperspectral X-ray computed tomography which allows the internal elemental chemistry of an object to be reconstructed and visualised in three dimensions. The method employs a spectroscopic X-ray imaging detector with sufficient energy resolution to distinguish individual elemental absorption edges. Elemental distributions can then be made by K-edge subtraction, or alternatively by voxel-wise spectral fitting to give relative atomic concentrations. We demonstrate its application to two material systems: studying the distribution of catalyst material on porous substrates for industrial scale chemical processing; and mapping of minerals and inclusion phases inside a mineralised ore sample. The method makes use of a standard laboratory X-ray source with measurement times similar to that required for conventional computed tomography.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 15979 |
| Journal | Scientific Reports |
| Volume | 5 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 30 Oct 2015 |
Keywords
- synchrotron-radiation
- detectors
- ct
- recognition
- medipix2
- surface
- system
- gold
- time
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Dive into the research topics of '3D chemical imaging in the laboratory by hyperspectral X-ray computed tomography'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 2 Finished
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Next Generation Multi-Dimensional X-ray Imaging
Withers, P. (PI), Burke, G. (CoI), Cernik, R. (CoI), Haigh, S. (CoI), Lee, P. (CoI) & Lionheart, W. (CoI)
1/02/15 → 31/01/20
Project: Research
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Structural Evolution across multiple time and length scales
Withers, P. (PI), Cartmell, S. (CoI), Cernik, R. (CoI), Derby, B. (CoI), Eichhorn, S. (CoI), Freemont, A. (CoI), Hollis, C. (CoI), Mummery, P. (CoI), Sherratt, M. (CoI), Thompson, G. (CoI) & Watts, D. (CoI)
1/06/11 → 31/05/16
Project: Research