Analyzer-less X-ray Interferometry with Super-Resolution Methods

Abstract

X-ray interferometry provides valuable information in terms of attenuation, small-angle scatter, and differential-phase contrast. This multi-modal contrast can aid in many clinical applications, such as lung diseases and breast cancer. However, standard interferometry has an analyzer grating that can increase the dose requirement to maintain the same image quality as a standard X-ray. We propose the use of super-resolution methods for X-ray grating interferometry without an analyzer, with detectors that fail to meet the Nyquist sampling rate needed for traditional image recovery algorithms. Detector phase steps are used to nominally recover the fringe sampling, followed by iterative recovery of the visibility and object parameters. This method enables Talbot-Lau interferometry without the X-ray absorbing analyzer. Removing the absorbing analyzer grating may improve dose efficiency and reduce system complexity. We demonstrate the use of super-resolution methods to iteratively reconstruct attenuation, differential-phase, and dark-field images using simulations of two-dimensional lung phantoms with lesions. A direct CdTe detector was simulated with pixel sizes of 55, 75, and 150 micron. The simulation results show that the proposed super-resolution iterative reconstruction method for Talbot-Lau Interferometry remains stable under the simulated noise conditions and can recover image parameters in cases where traditional algorithms cannot be used.

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