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A Monte Carlo simulation of scattering reduction in spectral x-ray computed tomography

Authors :
Erik Knudsen
Ulrik Lund Olsen
Jeppe Revall Frisvad
Kristoffer Haldrup
Matteo Busi
Erik Dreier Christensen
Mohamad Khalil
Jan Kehres
Chubar, Oleg
Sawhney, Kawal
Source :
Busi, M, Olsen, U L, Bergbäck Knudsen, E, Frisvad, J R, Kehres, J, Christensen, E D, Khalil, M & Haldrup, K 2017, A Monte Carlo simulation of scattering reduction in spectral x-ray computed tomography . in O Chubar & K Sawhney (eds), Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics IV . vol. 10388, 103880P, SPIE-International Society for Optical Engineering, Proceedings of SPIE-The International Society for Optical Engineering, SPIE Optics + Photonics 2017, San Diego, California, United States, 06/08/2017 . https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2273763
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
SPIE, 2017.

Abstract

In X-ray computed tomography (CT), scattered radiation plays an important role in the accurate reconstruction of the inspected object, leading to a loss of contrast between the different materials in the reconstruction volume and cupping artifacts in the images. We present a Monte Carlo simulation tool for spectral X-ray CT to predict the scattered radiation generated by complex samples. An experimental setup is presented to isolate the energy distribution of scattered radiation. Spectral CT is a novel technique implementing photon-counting detectors able to discriminate the energy of incoming photons, enabling spectral analysis of X-ray images. This technique is useful to extract efficiently more information on energy dependent quantities (e.g. mass attenuations coefficients) and study matter interactions (e.g. X-ray scattering, photoelectric absorption, etc...). Having a good knowledge of the spectral distribution of the scattered X-rays is fundamental to establish methods attempting to correct for it. The simulations are validated by real measurements using a CdTe spectral resolving detector (Multix ME-100). We observed the effect of the scattered radiation on the image reconstruction, becoming relevant in the energy range where the Compton events are dominant (i.e. above 50keV).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics IV
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ec3281488170e94f8857c6bec0b61636
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2273763