Evaluation of virtual source beam configurations for rapid tomographic reconstruction of gas and vapor concentrations in workplaces.

Beam path average data from an Open Path Fourier Transform Infrared (OP-FTIR) spectrometer can be used to reconstruct two-dimensional concentration maps of the gas and vapor contaminants in workplaces and the environment using computed tomographic (CT) techniques. However, a practical limitation arises because in the past, multiple-source and detector units were required to produce a sufficient number of intersecting beam paths in order to reconstruct concentration maps. Such a system can be applied to actual field monitoring situations only with great expense and difficulty. A single monostatic OP-FTIR system capable of rapid beam movement can eliminate this deficiency. Instead of many source and detector units, a virtual source arrangement has been proposed using a number of flat mirrors and retroreflectors to obtain intersecting folded beam paths. Three virtual source beam configurations generated for a single-beam steerable FTIR system were tested using 54 flat mirrors and four retroreflectors or 54 flat mirrors and 56 retroreflectors mounted along the perimeter walls of a typical 24- x 21-ft test room. The virtual source CT configurations were numerically evaluated using concentration maps created from tracer gas concentration distributions measured experimentally in a test chamber. Synthetic beam path integral data were calculated from the test maps and beam configurations. Computer simulations of different beam configurations were used to determine the effects of beam geometry. The effects of noise and peak reducing artifacts were evaluated. The performance of the tomographic reconstruction strategy was tested as a function of concentration and concentration gradients.

[1]  R L Byer,et al.  Experimental optical fan beam tomography. , 1984, Applied optics.

[2]  R. Spear,et al.  A transportable, remote sensing, infrared air-monitoring system. , 1991, American Industrial Hygiene Association journal.

[3]  David Leith,et al.  Remote Sensing and Computed Tomography in Industrial Hygiene , 1990 .

[4]  Steven P. Levine,et al.  Fourier transform infrared optical remote sensing for monitoring airborne gas and vapor contaminants in the field , 1994 .

[5]  L. Todd,et al.  Evaluation of algorithms for tomographic reconstruction of chemical concentrations in indoor air. , 1994, American Industrial Hygiene Association journal.

[6]  William W. Nazaroff,et al.  Novel approach for tomographic reconstruction of gas concentration distributions in air: Use of smooth basis functions and simulated annealing , 1996 .

[7]  David Leith,et al.  Extraction of spatial aerosol distributions from multispectral light extinction measurements with computed tomography , 1994 .

[8]  S P Levine,et al.  Imaging indoor tracer-gas concentrations with computed tomography: experimental results with a remote sensing FTIR system. , 1994, American Industrial Hygiene Association journal.

[9]  S P Levine,et al.  Workplace and environmental air contaminant concentrations measured by open path Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy: a statistical process control technique to detect changes from normal operating conditions. , 1994, Air & waste : journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.

[10]  L. Todd,et al.  Evaluation of optical source-detector configurations for tomographic reconstruction of chemical concentrations in indoor air. , 1994, American Industrial Hygiene Association journal.

[11]  R A Brooks,et al.  Theory of image reconstruction in computed tomography. , 1975, Radiology.

[12]  William W. Nazaroff,et al.  Stationary and time-dependent indoor tracer-gas concentration profiles measured by OP-FTIR remote sensing and SBFM-computed tomography , 1997 .