| Literature DB >> 35347165 |
I-Huan Chiu1, Shin'ichiro Takeda2, Meito Kajino3, Atsushi Shinohara4,5, Miho Katsuragawa2, Shunsaku Nagasawa2,6, Ryota Tomaru2,6, Goro Yabu2,6, Tadayuki Takahashi2,6, Shin Watanabe7, Soshi Takeshita8, Yasuhiro Miyake8, Kazuhiko Ninomiya4.
Abstract
Elemental analysis based on muonic X-rays resulting from muon irradiation provides information about bulk material composition without causing damage, which is essential in the case of precious or otherwise unreachable samples, such as in archeology and planetary science. We developed a three-dimensional (3D) elemental analysis technique by combining the elemental analysis method based on negative muons with an imaging cadmium telluride double-sided strip detector (CdTe-DSD) designed for the hard X-ray and soft [Formula: see text]-ray observation. A muon irradiation experiment using spherical plastic samples was conducted at the Japan Proton Accelerator Research Complex (J-PARC); a set of projection images was taken by the CdTe-DSD, equipped with a pinhole collimator, for different sample rotation angles. The projection images measured by the CdTe-DSD were utilized to obtain a 3D volumetric phantom by using the maximum likelihood expectation maximization algorithm. The reconstructed phantom successfully revealed the 3D distribution of carbon in the bulk samples and the stopping depth of the muons. This result demonstrated the feasibility of the proposed non-destructive 3D elemental analysis method for bulk material analysis based on muonic X-rays.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35347165 PMCID: PMC8960870 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09137-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Geometry of the imaging experiment.
Figure 2(a) Hit position of the incident photons with energy larger than 10 keV on the CdTe-DSD. The white bands in the image are the non-functioning strips. (b) Energy spectra of the signal and background regions.
Figure 3Projection images of the samples taken by the CdTe double-sided strip detector at different rotation angles, along with the actual positioning of the samples (insets). The energy regions of 12–16 keV and 72–78 keV were used to extract all signals of C and C .
Figure 4(a) Reconstructed three-dimensional (3D) phantom. (b) Tomographic images at four different layers perpendicular to the y-axis.
The resulting mean and FWHM values of the reconstructed balls in the three-dimensional phantom along the x-, y-, and z-axes.
| Name | x direction (mm) | y direction (mm) | z direction (mm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | FWHM | Mean | FWHM | Mean | FWHM | |
| Large-1 | 29.38 | 7.98 | 20.98 | 10.52 | 23.80 | 3.29 |
| Large-2 | 12.01 | 8.54 | 19.20 | 12.29 | 16.07 | 3.13 |
| Small-1 | 22.31 | 6.61 | 9.97 | 4.91 | 21.72 | 3.96 |
| Small-2 | 20.85 | 8.71 | 30.97 | 5.31 | 19.18 | 4.12 |
Figure 5(a) Mathematical description of the geometry for the experiment with Am. (b) Maximum likelihood expectation maximization implementation.