X-Ray Dark-Field and Phase Retrieval Without Optics, via the Fokker–Planck Equation

Emerging methods of x-ray imaging that capture phase and dark-field effects are equipping medicine with complementary sensitivity to conventional radiography. These methods are being applied over a wide range of scales, from virtual histology to clinical chest imaging, and typically require the introduction of optics such as gratings. Here, we consider extracting x-ray phase and dark-field signals from bright-field images collected using nothing more than a coherent x-ray source and a detector. Our approach is based on the Fokker–Planck equation for paraxial imaging, which is the diffusive generalization of the transport-of-intensity equation. Specifically, we utilize the Fokker–Planck equation in the context of propagation-based phase-contrast imaging, where we show that two intensity images are sufficient for successful retrieval of both the projected thickness and the dark-field signal associated with the sample. We show the results of our algorithm using both a simulated dataset and an experimental dataset. These demonstrate that the x-ray dark-field signal can be extracted from propagation-based images, and that sample thickness can be retrieved with better spatial resolution when dark-field effects are taken into account. We anticipate the proposed algorithm will be of benefit in biomedical imaging, industrial settings, and other non-invasive imaging applications.
Source: IEE Transactions on Medical Imaging - Category: Biomedical Engineering Source Type: research