In this paper, various kinds of applications are presented, in which tomographic image data depicting microstructures of materials are semantically segmented by combining machine learning methods and conventional image processing steps. The main focus of this paper is the grain-wise segmentation of time-resolved CT data of an AlCu specimen which was obtained in between several Ostwald ripening steps. The poorly visible grain boundaries in 3D CT data were enhanced using convolutional neural networks (CNNs). The CNN architectures considered in this paper are a 2D U-Net, a multichannel 2D U-Net and a 3D U-Net where the latter was trained at a lower resolution due to memory limitations. For training the CNNs, ground truth information was derived from 3D X-ray diffraction (3DXRD) measurements. The grain boundary images enhanced by the CNNs were then segmented using a marker-based watershed algorithm with an additional postprocessing step for reducing oversegmentation. The segmentation results obtained by this procedure were quantitatively compared to ground truth information derived by the 3DXRD measurements. A quantitative comparison between segmentation results indicates that the 3D U-Net performs best among the considered U-Net architectures. Additionally, a scenario, in which "ground truth" data is only available in one time step, is considered. Therefore, a CNN was trained only with CT and 3DXRD data from the last measured time step. The trained network and the image processing steps were then applied to the entire series of CT scans. The resulting segmentations exhibited a similar quality compared to those obtained by the network which was trained with the entire series of CT scans.
In this paper, 3D image data of ore particle systems is investigated. By combining X-ray micro tomography (XMT) with scanning electron microscope (SEM) based image analysis additional information about the mineralogical composition from certain planar sections can be gained. For the analysis of tomographic images of particle systems the extraction of single particles is essential. This is performed with a marker-based watershed algorithm and a post-processing step utilizing a neural network to reduce oversegmentation. The results are validated by comparing the 3D particle-wise segmentation empirically with 2D SEM images which have been obtained with a different imaging process and segmentation algorithm. Finally, a stereological application is shown, in which planar SEM images are embedded into the tomographic 3D image. This allows the estimation of local X-ray attenuation coefficients, which are material-specific quantities, in the entire tomographic image.
Accurately capturing the architecture of single lithium-ion electrode particles is necessary for understanding their performance limitations and degradation mechanisms through multi-physics modeling. Information is drawn from multimodal microscopy techniques to artificially generate LiNi0.5Mn0.3Co0.2O2 particles with full sub-particle grain detail. Statistical representations of particle architectures are derived from X-ray nano-computed tomography data supporting an ‘outer shell’ model, and sub-particle grain representations are derived from focused-ion beam electron backscatter diffraction data supporting a ‘grain’ model. A random field model used to characterize and generate the outer shells, and a random tessellation model used to characterize and generate grain architectures, are combined to form a multi-scale model for the generation of virtual electrode particles with full-grain detail. This work demonstrates the possibility of generating representative single electrode particle architectures for modeling and characterization that can guide synthesis approaches of particle architectures with enhanced performance.
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