Publication:

DYRECT Computed Tomography: DYnamic Reconstruction of Events on a Continuous Timescale

 
cris.virtual.department#PLACEHOLDER_PARENT_METADATA_VALUE#
cris.virtual.orcid0000-0002-5543-2631
cris.virtualsource.departmentd1c9bf90-6a8a-49df-8d5c-c56eb15a6671
cris.virtualsource.orcidd1c9bf90-6a8a-49df-8d5c-c56eb15a6671
dc.contributor.authorGoethals, Wannes
dc.contributor.authorBultreys, Tom
dc.contributor.authorBerg, Steffen
dc.contributor.authorBoone Matthieu N.
dc.contributor.authorAelterman, Jan
dc.date.accessioned2025-05-25T05:33:57Z
dc.date.available2025-05-25T05:33:57Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.description.abstractTime-resolved high-resolution X-ray Computed Tomography (4D μCT) is an imaging technique that offers insight into the evolution of dynamic processes inside materials that are opaque to visible light. Conventional tomographic reconstruction techniques are based on constructing a sequence of 3D images from radiographic projections, recorded during time-frames that represent global sample states. This frame-based approach limits the temporal resolution compared to dynamic radiography experiments, and it leads to an inflation of the amount of data. This results in costly post-processing computations to quantify the dynamic behaviour from the sequence of time-frames, hereby often ignoring the temporal correlations of the sample structure. Our proposed 4D μCT reconstruction technique, named DYRECT, estimates individual attenuation evolution profiles for each position in the sample with time resolution down to the single projection level. This leads to a novel memory-efficient event-based representation for samples that display sudden, irreversible transitions over time. As little as three image volumes suffice for a broad range of applications: the initial attenuations, the final attenuations and the local transition times. This third volume represents spatially distributed events on a continuous timescale instead of the discrete global time-frames. We propose a method to iteratively reconstruct the transition times and the attenuation volumes. The dynamic reconstruction technique was validated on synthetic ground truth data and experimental data, and was found to effectively pinpoint the transition times in the synthetic dataset with a time resolution corresponding to less than a tenth of the amount of projections required to reconstruct traditional μCT time-frames.
dc.description.wosFundingTextThis work was supported in part by Ghent University Special Research Fund (BOF-UGent) through UGCT Core Facility under Grant BOF.COR.2022.008,in part by ERC under Grant 101116228 / Flows copy, in part by the European Union, and in part by Shell Global Solutions International B.V.
dc.identifier.doi10.1109/TCI.2025.3566241
dc.identifier.issn2573-0436
dc.identifier.urihttps://imec-publications.be/handle/20.500.12860/45708
dc.publisherIEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
dc.source.beginpage638
dc.source.endpage649
dc.source.journalIEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTATIONAL IMAGING
dc.source.numberofpages12
dc.source.volume11
dc.subject.keywordsPORE-SCALE
dc.subject.keywordsCT
dc.subject.keywordsIMPROVEMENT
dc.subject.keywordsREDUCTION
dc.subject.keywordsMODEL
dc.title

DYRECT Computed Tomography: DYnamic Reconstruction of Events on a Continuous Timescale

dc.typeJournal article
dspace.entity.typePublication
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