Publication | Open Access
An x-ray tomography facility for quantitative prediction of mechanical and transport properties in geological, biological, and synthetic systems
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Citations
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References
2004
Year
Computed TomographyCircular TrajectoryEngineeringMicroscopyMechanical EngineeringBiomedical EngineeringPolycapillary OpticsX-ray FluorescenceX-ray ImagingX-ray TechnologyCt ScanPhoton-counting Computed TomographyRadiation ImagingBiophysicsRadiologyHealth SciencesX-ray Tomography FacilityMedical ImagingGeologyQuantitative PredictionSynthetic SystemsFibre-reinforced CompositesRadiographic ImagingX-ray DiffractionBiomedical ImagingGeomechanicsVirtual MaterialsTomography
A fully integrated X-ray tomography facility with the ability to generate tomograms with 2048<sup>3</sup> voxels at 2 micron spatial resolution was built to satisfy the requirements of a virtual materials testing laboratory. The instrument comprises of a continuously pumped micro-focus X-ray gun, a milli-degree rotation stage and a high resolution and large field X-ray camera, configured in a cone beam geometry with a circular trajectory. The purpose of this facility is to routinely analyse and investigate real world biological, geological and synthetic materials at a scale in which the traditional domains of physics, chemistry, biology and geology merge. During the first 2 years of operation, approximately 4 Terabytes of data have been collected, processed and analysed, both as static and in some cases as composite dynamic data sets. This incorporates over 300 tomograms with 1024<sup>3</sup> voxels and 50 tomograms with 2048<sup>3</sup> voxels for a wide range of research fields. Specimens analysed include sedimentary rocks, soils, bone, soft tissue, ceramics, fibre-reinforced composites, foams, wood, paper, fossils, sphere packs, bio-morphs and small animals. In this paper, the flexibility of the facility is highlighted with some prime examples.
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