Analysis of X-ray phase contrast imaging in atomizing sprays
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2012
Recent studies of spray-related flow fields
using synchrotron-based X-ray phase contrast imaging
have produced results that are sometimes straightforward
to interpret in terms of the fluid structure, but in other cases the images do not reflect generally accepted physics of fluid motion. It has been unclear why some images have
the appearance of a normal fluid stream while others depart
significantly from expectation. The detailed numerical
modeling presented here is meant to explain the images and
resolve common questions about the technique. The simulations show that collimated X-ray beams will always
contain signatures from every possible encounter, from the
input plane to the exit plane, and these signatures generate overlapping phase contrast patterns that can prove at times impossible to interpret. Clouds of moderate-to large-size drops produce a complex, mottled X-ray phase contrast image indicating the presence of the cloud; but it is an image that cannot be interpreted further. Small drops generate something akin to one gray pixel image each, and their size is close to the resolution limit of the instrument, so the diffraction pattern is broadened by the instrument response into something more like a small diffuse blob. Dense clouds of small drops produce a composite image that is a fairly uniform gray mass indicating the presence of a drop cloud that cannot be interpreted further. Moreover, it is not possible to image intact liquid structures behind clouds of drops. Whenever a significant number of drops are present, therefore, X-ray phase contrast images are dominated by unavoidable artifacts of the technique. Sprays, by definition, consist of droplet clouds and this means that internal features in the spray formation region cannot be investigated using X-ray phase contrast imaging.