Monitored Tomographic Reconstruction-An Advanced Tool to Study the 3D Morphology of Nanomaterials.

Konstantin Bulatov, Marina Chukalina, Kristina Kutukova, Vlad Kohan, Anastasia Ingacheva, Alexey Buzmakov, Vladimir V Arlazarov, Ehrenfried Zschech
Author Information
  1. Konstantin Bulatov: Federal Research Center "Computer Science and Control" of Russian Academy of Sciences, 117312 Moscow, Russia.
  2. Marina Chukalina: Smart Engines Service LLC, 117312 Moscow, Russia. ORCID
  3. Kristina Kutukova: Fraunhofer Institute for Ceramic Technologies and Systems, 01109 Dresden, Germany.
  4. Vlad Kohan: Smart Engines Service LLC, 117312 Moscow, Russia.
  5. Anastasia Ingacheva: Smart Engines Service LLC, 117312 Moscow, Russia.
  6. Alexey Buzmakov: Smart Engines Service LLC, 117312 Moscow, Russia.
  7. Vladimir V Arlazarov: Federal Research Center "Computer Science and Control" of Russian Academy of Sciences, 117312 Moscow, Russia.
  8. Ehrenfried Zschech: DeepXscan GmbH, 01109 Dresden, Germany.

Abstract

Detailed and accurate three-dimensional (3D) information about the morphology of hierarchically structured materials is derived from multi-scale X-ray computed tomography (XCT) and subsequent 3D data reconstruction. High-resolution X-ray microscopy and nano-XCT are suitable techniques to nondestructively study nanomaterials, including porous or skeleton materials. However, laboratory nano-XCT studies are very time-consuming. To reduce the time-to-data by more than an order of magnitude, we propose taking advantage of a monitored tomographic reconstruction. The benefit of this new protocol for 3D imaging is that the data acquisition for each projection is interspersed by image reconstruction. We demonstrate this new approach for nano-XCT data of a novel transition-metal-based materials system: MoNi electrocatalysts anchored on MoO cuboids aligned on Ni foam (MoNi/MoO@Ni). Quantitative data that describe the 3D morphology of this hierarchically structured system with an advanced electrocatalytically active nanomaterial are needed to tailor performance and durability of the electrocatalyst system. We present the framework for monitored tomographic reconstruction, construct three stopping rules for various reconstruction quality metrics and provide their experimental evaluation.

Keywords

References

  1. Sci Rep. 2020 May 6;10(1):7682 [PMID: 32376852]
  2. Nat Commun. 2017 May 17;8:15437 [PMID: 28513620]
  3. Nanomaterials (Basel). 2020 May 18;10(5): [PMID: 32443489]
  4. Biomed Opt Express. 2017 Jan 09;8(2):679-694 [PMID: 28270976]
  5. Med Image Anal. 2017 Oct;41:1 [PMID: 28684016]
  6. Sci Rep. 2018 Feb 7;8(1):2575 [PMID: 29416047]
  7. Phys Med Biol. 1996 Sep;41(9):1727-43 [PMID: 8884909]

Grants

  1. 18-29-26027/Russian Foundation for Basic Research
  2. 18-29-26036/Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.03DreconstructiondatamorphologymaterialsX-raynano-XCTmonitoredhierarchicallystructuredcomputedtomographytomographicnewsystemstoppingqualitymetricsDetailedaccuratethree-dimensionalinformationderivedmulti-scaleXCTsubsequentHigh-resolutionmicroscopysuitabletechniquesnondestructivelystudynanomaterialsincludingporousskeletonHoweverlaboratorystudiestime-consumingreducetime-to-dataordermagnitudeproposetakingadvantagebenefitprotocolimagingacquisitionprojectioninterspersedimagedemonstrateapproachnoveltransition-metal-basedsystem:MoNielectrocatalystsanchoredMoOcuboidsalignedNifoamMoNi/MoO@NiQuantitativedescribeadvancedelectrocatalyticallyactivenanomaterialneededtailorperformancedurabilityelectrocatalystpresentframeworkconstructthreerulesvariousprovideexperimentalevaluationMonitoredTomographicReconstruction-AnAdvancedToolStudyMorphologyNanomaterialshierarchicalstructuresnanoruletimereducing

Similar Articles

Cited By