Inverse geometry for grating-based x-ray phase-contrast imagingTilman Donath, Michael Chabior, Franz Pfeiffer et al.|Journal of Applied Physics|2009 Phase-contrast imaging using conventional polychromatic x-ray sources and grating interferometers has been developed and demonstrated for x-ray energies up to 60 keV. Here, we conduct an analysis of possible grating configurations for this technique and present further geometrical arrangements not considered so far. An inverse interferometer geometry is investigated that offers significant advantages for grating fabrication and for the application of the method in computed tomography (CT) scanners. We derive and measure the interferometer’s angular sensitivity for both the inverse and the conventional configuration as a function of the sample position. Thereby, we show that both arrangements are equally sensitive and that the highest sensitivity is obtained, when the investigated object is close to the interferometer’s phase grating. We also discuss the question whether the sample should be placed in front of or behind the phase grating. For CT applications, we propose an inverse geometry with the sample position behind the phase grating.
The LIGA technique and its potential for microsystems-a surveyW. Bacher, Wolfgang Menz, J. Mohr|IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics|1995 The LIGA technique, which is being developed at the Research Center Karlsruhe, offers the possibility to manufacture microstructures with arbitrary lateral geometry, lateral dimensions down to below 1 /spl mu/m and aspect ratios up to 500 from a variety of materials (metals, plastics, and ceramics). The basic steps of X-ray lithography, electroplating, and plastic molding, are briefly described. Examples of applications of the LIGA technique are: optical components (high performance microspectrometer), mechanical components (acceleration sensor with integrated temperature compensation), and fluidic components (micropumps) which are presented and discussed. Microcomponents will be of limited interest in the future if it will not be possible to integrate them into microsystems. Microsystems must be more powerful than the sum total of their components. This is discussed in the final chapter of this article.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
Trimodal low-dose X-ray tomographyIrène Zanette, Martin Bech, Alexander Rack et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2012 X-ray grating interferometry is a coherent imaging technique that bears tremendous potential for three-dimensional tomographic imaging of soft biological tissue and other specimens whose details exhibit very weak absorption contrast. It is intrinsically trimodal, delivering phase contrast, absorption contrast, and scattering (“dark-field”) contrast. Recently reported acquisition strategies for grating-interferometric phase tomography constitute a major improvement of dose efficiency and speed. In particular, some of these techniques eliminate the need for scanning of one of the gratings (“phase stepping”). This advantage, however, comes at the cost of other limitations. These can be a loss in spatial resolution, or the inability to fully separate the three imaging modalities. In the present paper we report a data acquisition and processing method that optimizes dose efficiency but does not share the main limitations of other recently reported methods. Although our method still relies on phase stepping, it effectively uses only down to a single detector frame per projection angle and yields images corresponding to all three contrast modalities. In particular, this means that dark-field imaging remains accessible. The method is also compliant with data acquisition over an angular range of only 180° and with a continuous rotation of the specimen.
Soft X-ray lithography of high aspect ratio SU8 submicron structuresE. Reznikova, J. Mohr, Martin Boerner et al.|Microsystem Technologies|2008 In-vivo X-ray Dark-Field Chest Radiography of a PigAbstract X-ray chest radiography is an inexpensive and broadly available tool for initial assessment of the lung in clinical routine, but typically lacks diagnostic sensitivity for detection of pulmonary diseases in their early stages. Recent X-ray dark-field (XDF) imaging studies on mice have shown significant improvements in imaging-based lung diagnostics. Especially in the case of early diagnosis of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), XDF imaging clearly outperforms conventional radiography. However, a translation of this technique towards the investigation of larger mammals and finally humans has not yet been achieved. In this letter, we present the first in - vivo XDF full-field chest radiographs (32 × 35 cm 2 ) of a living pig, acquired with clinically compatible parameters (40 s scan time, approx. 80 µSv dose). For imaging, we developed a novel high-energy XDF system that overcomes the limitations of currently established setups. Our XDF radiographs yield sufficiently high image quality to enable radiographic evaluation of the lungs. We consider this a milestone in the bench-to-bedside translation of XDF imaging and expect XDF imaging to become an invaluable tool in clinical practice, both as a general chest X-ray modality and as a dedicated tool for high-risk patients affected by smoking, industrial work and indoor cooking.