Terahertz Constant Velocity Flying Spot for 3D Tomographic Imaging

J Imaging. 2023 May 31;9(6):112. doi: 10.3390/jimaging9060112.

Abstract

This work reports on a terahertz tomography technique using constant velocity flying spot scanning as illumination. This technique is essentially based on the combination of a hyperspectral thermoconverter and an infrared camera used as a sensor, a source of terahertz radiation held on a translation scanner, and a vial of hydroalcoholic gel used as a sample and mounted on a rotating stage for the measurement of its absorbance at several angular positions. From the projections made in 2.5 h and expressed in terms of sinograms, the 3D volume of the absorption coefficient of the vial is reconstructed by a back-projection method based on the inverse Radon transform. This result confirms that this technique is usable on samples of complex and nonaxisymmetric shapes; moreover, it allows 3D qualitative chemical information with a possible phase separation in the terahertz spectral range to be obtained in heterogeneous and complex semitransparent media.

Keywords: 3D tomography; chemical information; infrared thermospectroscopy; terahertz imaging sensor.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by CNRS.