3D chemical imaging in the laboratory by hyperspectral X-ray computed tomography

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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 languageEnglish
    Article number15979
    JournalScientific Reports
    Volume5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 30 Oct 2015

    Keywords

    • synchrotron-radiation
    • detectors
    • ct
    • recognition
    • medipix2
    • surface
    • system
    • gold
    • time

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