NASA Computer Imaging
Technology Is Helping Commercial Firm See New Jobs And More Profits
April 1997
Bio-Imaging
Research, Inc., (BIR) of Lincolnshire, Ill., is seeing new employees
in its plant and more profits at the end of the year, all thanks
to their commercializing computer imaging technologies developed
for NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
The Advanced
Computed Tomography Inspection System (ACTIS) was put into service
at Marshall in 1989 to find imperfections in aerospace structures
and components such as rocket motor casings, assemblies and nozzles
used in the Space Shuttle program. ACTIS helped NASA engineers characterize
structural assemblies by producing high-quality computed tomography
(CT) images. These images demonstrated the ablative properties of
various solid rocket motor nozzle assembly materials and revealed
anomalies at bondline interfaces that could have caused mission
failures. The two-million-volt ACTIS system at Marshall has also
found flaws in turbine and valve castings for NASA.
Having proven
its potential in the national space program, the system was used
to scan an entire automobile, as well as large castings used in
the automotive industry. It has scanned a cruise missile's jet engine.
A similar ACTIS at Boeing has scanned a complete satellite, avoiding
the time and expense of opening it, then resealing and resterilizing
it. It has also verified the safety of spaceborne battery packs.
BIR undertook
to refine the technology for broader commercial applications, introducing
a smaller, PC-based version called ACTIS+ for general industrial
use. BIR spokesman Charles Smith said recently, "ACTIS+ provides
CT imaging capability at less than a third the cost of current CT
systems."
CT itself is
a technology derived partly from the Apollo space program of the
1960's and partly from the field of medicine. CT creates cross-sectional
images by projecting a thin beam of x-rays through one plane of
an object from many different angles. In some scanners, a cone beam
covers an area detector so that many slices or a volume can be scanned
at once.
Millions of
people around the world benefit each year from the medical applications
of the technology. Hospitals use CT scanners to help diagnose illnesses
and assess injuries. The technology also was quickly adopted by
industries for non-destructive testing.
The key to the
low cost of ACTIS+ is that it is designed to be added to existing
real-time radiography (RTR) systems. It uses major RTR components
and can eliminate the expense of an x-ray system and a detector
system.
The ACTIS+ system
consists of a high-precision rotation/elevation manipulator, a color
image monitor, a graphical user interface monitor, a keyboard with
mouse, and a Unix-based PC compatible workstation. "From our viewpoint,"
Smith says, "one of the most important commercial applications of
the technology came when Marshall allowed us to scan a 55-gallon
drum containing cement, metal parts, liquids, and other materials.
This allowed us to demonstrate to the U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE) that computed tomography is much better at seeing what is
inside drums of radioactive waste than any existing techniques."
The tests at
Marshall led to the development of Waste Inspection Tomography (WIT),
a trailer-mounted portable system that can be taken to waste dump
sites to identify the contents in drums found there. "We have written
software that enables us to combine three-dimensional x-ray CT images
of the drum's contents with three-dimensional gamma-ray information
on where the radioactivity is inside the drum. To our knowledge,"
said Richard Bernardi, program manager for WIT, "this is the only
non-medical application that presents two different types of sensor
information in a single picture. BIR has gone even further by adding
a third sensor that provides information on the distribution of
neutron emitters, such as plutonium, into the three-dimensional
image."
The main sensor
in the WIT trailer is a two-million-volt CT system. The voltage
is able to see through drums filled with high-density material,
such as cement or sludge, which cannot be penetrated by other x-ray
systems used by the DOE. While the scanner can provide "quick look"
images, its primary value is in making volume CT images comprised
of more than 75 individual slices. Two gamma cameras image the internal
radioactivity and their output can be presented in either two- or
three-dimensional form. Special software allows their images to
be accurately superimposed on the density images from the CT scanner.
The radioactivity is measured by nuclear spectroscopy, which determines
its gamma-ray energies and then looks up that energy in a table
to identify individual isotopes. The system can distinguish between
weak internal sources surrounded by low-density material and a shielded
stronger source.
It can also
identify and measure the volume of potentially corrosive free liquids,
the extent to which the storage drum's wall may have been thinned
by corrosion, and the presence of objects that are supposed to be
forbidden in storage drums. BIR has been able to integrate the results
of a neutron-sensing system developed by Lockheed-Martin's Pinellas,
Fla., facility, and superimpose the spatial distribution of neutron
intensities onto the three-dimensional x-ray density information.
Bernardi said the mobile device has performed outstandingly at a
number of DOE sites. The device is back at BIR's facility. BIR hopes
to increase the number of detectors on the unit to scan drums from
five to 30 times faster. BIR hopes to build two additional trailers
so as to be able to offer scanning and other analytic services to
DOE and to nuclear power utilities that are a significant source
of radioactive waste.
Dr. John F.
Moore, president of BIR, pointed out that the technology developed
for NASA has led to other products. BIR has adapted the detectors
to keep their efficiency with x-ray energies as high as nine million
volts, and have installed a six-meter-high linear detector array
to inspect tractor-trailers for contraband at the border crossings
near Shenzhen in the People's Republic of China. Systems now in
use by the U.S. Customs Service operate at 450,000 volts and - while
able to see false compartments in the outer walls of vehicles -
they cannot look through heavily loaded cargo as well as the system
in use by the Chinese, he said. For more information on BIR, contact
Smith at 425 Barclay Blvd., Lincolnshire, IL 60069-3624 or phone
(847) 634-6425.
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