Segmentation of Low-contrast Three-phase X-ray Computed Tomography Images of Porous Media
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-21-2013
Abstract
X-Ray Computed Tomography (XCT) is an important tool to study porous-media microstructure and fluids present within the void space. In the presence of multiple fluid phases (e.g. air-water in soil science or oil-water-gas in petroleum engineering), the contrast between the fluid phases becomes important for accurate image segmentation. In some cases (e.g. a white light source or low flux), it is not possible to illuminate one of the fluid phases. The result is then a single image containing multiple phases that may contain overlapping peaks of the fluid phases due to little difference in the absorption coefficients. Building upon work done in medical-image-processing research, we have adopted a nonlinear anisotropic diffusion technique to remove noise from the XCT image that also leads to improved peak separation in the image histogram. The noise-free image is the then segmented using indicator kriging and the results are compared with segmentation results obtained using absorption-edge imaging. © ISTE Ltd 2010.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Advances in Computed Tomography for Geomaterials: GeoX 2010
First Page
254
Last Page
261
Recommended Citation
Bhattad, P., Willson, C., & Thompson, K. (2013). Segmentation of Low-contrast Three-phase X-ray Computed Tomography Images of Porous Media. Advances in Computed Tomography for Geomaterials: GeoX 2010, 254-261. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118557723.ch30