Title page for ETD etd-080799-132525


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Lu, Qiang
Author's Email Address qianglu@vt.edu
URN etd-080799-132525
Title THE UTILITY OF X-RAY DUAL-ENERGY TRANSMISSION AND SCATTER TECHNOLOGIES FOR ILLICIT MATERIAL DETECTION
Degree PhD
Department Electrical and Computer Engineering
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Dr. Richard W. Conners Committee Chair
Dr. A. Lynn Abbott Committee Member
Dr. Earl Kline Committee Member
Dr. James Armstrong Committee Member
Dr. Jeffrey Reed Committee Member
Dr. Scott Midkiff Committee Member
Keywords
  • illicit material detection
  • image processing
  • x-ray
Date of Defense 1999-04-19
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
X-ray devices have demonstrated the ability to characterize a material at the molecular and

atomic levels. This ability is particularly important for detecting plastic explosives, where object

shape information cannot be used. X-ray devices are relatively inexpensive compared to many

other detection technologies. X-ray technology is considered as the technology for detecting

illicit materials. Using x-ray technology, a material's density- and effective atomic number or

Zeff-related information can be determined. In theory, an illicit material can be identified using

those two pieces of information.



This dissertation discusses explosives detection in passenger luggage bags. The x-ray

technology used is called R-L multi-sensing technology. The R-L technology was developed by

researchers at Virginia Tech. It is the first true multisensing technology used for explosive

detection. It uses dual-energy transmission and scatter technologies to obtain characteristic

values of an object, i.e., R and L. The material type of this object can then be determined using

R-L plane. The characteristic value R is computed using signals from dual-energy transmission

modality. R is related to Zeff. The characteristic value L is computed using signals from low-energy

transmission and scatter modalities. L is related to density. Compared to single-sensing

technologies and pseudo multi-sensing technologies, the detection accuracy of R-L technology

should be much higher.



The R and L values of an object can only be computed from an object's true gray levels. True

gray level refers to the measured gray level of an object when it is not overlapped with any other

objects. The problem is objects in a bag almost always overlap with other objects. Being able to

identify the object of interest and remove the overlap effects becomes the key issue that needs to

be solved.



The discussion in this dissertation focuses on the development of the image-processing system

used on this multiple sensor system. This image-processing system is comprised of four steps.

The first step is to spatially register images from all the sensing modalities. The second step is to

remove noise using the edge-preserving smoothing algorithm. The third step is to segment

image into regions with relatively uniform gray levels. The fourth step is to compute the true

gray levels for objects of interest using the mathematical models for removing overlapping

effects. Most of the research focuses on developing a robust segmentation algorithm for

segmenting x-ray bag images and developing mathematical models for removing object

overlapping effects. The unique contribution of this dissertation includes the development of

those mathematical models used for removing object-overlapping effects, and the development

of the algorithm for determining an object's true gray levels.



The experimental verification shows that the algorithms for registration, smoothing, and

segmentation work well. The algorithm that computes the true gray levels of an object can

perform the computation quite precisely in transmission modality. However, the methods that

were developed for computing an object's true gray levels in scatter images are much less

accurate.

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