Phase-contrast neutron imaging compared with wave propagation and McStas simulations

J Appl Crystallogr. 2024 May 10;57(Pt 3):707-713. doi: 10.1107/S1600576724003030. eCollection 2024 Jun 1.

Abstract

Propagation-based phase contrast, for example in the form of edge enhancement contrast, is well established within X-ray imaging but is not widely used in neutron imaging. This technique can help increase the contrast of low-attenuation samples but may confuse quantitative absorption measurements. Therefore, it is important to understand the experimental parameters that cause and amplify or dampen this effect in order to optimize future experiments properly. Two simulation approaches have been investigated, a wave-based simulation and a particle-based simulation conducted in McStas [Willendrup & Lefmann (2020). J. Neutron Res. 22, 1-16], and they are compared with experimental data. The experiment was done on a sample of metal foils with weakly and strongly neutron absorbing layers, which were measured while varying the rotation angle and propagation distance from the sample. The experimental data show multiple signals: attenuation, phase contrast and reflection. The wave model reproduces the sample attenuation and the phase peaks but it does not reproduce the behavior of these peaks as a function of rotation angle. The McStas simulation agrees better with the experimental data, as it reproduces attenuation, phase peaks and reflection, as well as the change in these signals as a function of rotation angle and distance. This suggests that the McStas simulation approach, where the particle description of the neutron facilitates the incorporation of multiple effects, is the most convenient way of modeling edge enhancement in neutron imaging.

Keywords: McStas; neutron imaging; phase-contrast imaging; refraction; simulations.

Grants and funding

We acknowledge support from the ESS Lighthouse on Hard Materials in 3D, SOLID, funded by the Danish Agency for Science and Higher Education (grant No. 8144-00002B). We thank the Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation for funding the instrument centre DanScatt.