The novel possibilities of phase feature detection in radiography at a third generation synchrotron radiation source are used to image, both in projection and in computed tomography, a cracked silicon single crystal and metal matrix composites strained in tension. Through an instrumentally very simple technique, based on Fresnel diffraction, phase jumps related to the interface between the matrix and the reinforcing phases of the composites are detected even when these phases show very similar x-ray attenuation. Strain-induced cracks with openings below the micrometer range are also visible through the phase modulation they introduce, illustrating the potential of the technique for assessing damage in materials with improved resolution and sensitivity.
X-ray computed microtomography is particularly well suited for studying trabecular bone architecture, which requires three-dimensional (3-D) images with high spatial resolution. For this purpose, we describe a three-dimensional computed microtomography (microCT) system using synchrotron radiation, developed at ESRF. Since synchrotron radiation provides a monochromatic and high photon flux x-ray beam, it allows high resolution and a high signal-to-noise ratio imaging. The principle of the system is based on truly three-dimensional parallel tomographic acquisition. It uses a two-dimensional (2-D) CCD-based detector to record 2-D radiographs of the transmitted beam through the sample under different angles of view. The 3-D tomographic reconstruction, performed by an exact 3-D filtered backprojection algorithm, yields 3-D images with cubic voxels. The spatial resolution of the detector was experimentally measured. For the application to bone investigation, the voxel size was set to 6.65 microm, and the experimental spatial resolution was found to be 11 microm. The reconstructed linear attenuation coefficient was calibrated from hydroxyapatite phantoms. Image processing tools are being developed to extract structural parameters quantifying trabecular bone architecture from the 3-D microCT images. First results on human trabecular bone samples are presented.
The availability of three-dimensional measuring techniques coupled to specific image processing methods opens new opportunities for the analysis of bone structure. In particular, synchrotron radiation microtomography may provide three-dimensional images with spatial resolution as high as one micrometer. Moreover, the use of a monoenergetic synchrotron beam, which avoids beam-hardening effects, allows quantitative measurements of the degree of mineralization in bone samples. Indeed, the reconstructed gray levels of tomographic images correspond directly to a map of the linear attenuation coefficient within the sample. Since the absorption depends on the amount of mineral content, we proposed a calibration method to evaluate the three-dimensional distribution of the degree of mineralization within the sample. First a theoretical linear relationship modeling the linear attenuation coefficient as a function of the hydroxyapatite concentrations was derived. Then, an experimental validation on phantoms confirmed both the accuracy of the image processing tools and the experimental setup used. Finally, the analysis of the degree of mineralization in four iliac crest bone biopsy samples was reported. Our method was compared to the reference microradiography technique, currently used for this quantification in two dimensions. The concentration values of the degree of mineralization were found with both techniques in the range 0.5-1.6 g of mineral per cubic centimeter of bone, both in cortical and in trabecular region. The mean difference between the two techniques was around 4.7%, and was slightly higher in trabecular region than in cortical bone.
We report here some pre-clinical testing of new scaffolds. To compare these second generation ceramic scaffolds more suitable for a tissue engineering approach we had to first establish animal models and analysis procedures including the use of X-ray-computed microtomography associated with X-rays synchroton radiation.
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