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Removing Stripes, Scratches, and Curtaining with Nonrecoverable Compressed Sensing

  • Jonathan Schwartz*
  • , Yi Jiang
  • , Yongjie Wang
  • , Anthony Aiello
  • , Pallab Bhattacharya
  • , Hui Yuan
  • , Zetian Mi
  • , Nabil Bassim
  • , Robert Hovden
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Highly-directional image artifacts such as ion mill curtaining, mechanical scratches, or image striping from beam instability degrade the interpretability of micrographs. These unwanted, aperiodic features extend the image along a primary direction and occupy a small wedge of information in Fourier space. Deleting this wedge of data replaces stripes, scratches, or curtaining, with more complex streaking and blurring artifacts—known within the tomography community as “missing wedge” artifacts. Here, we overcome this problem by recovering the missing region using total variation minimization, which leverages image sparsity-based reconstruction techniques—colloquially referred to as compressed sensing (CS)—to reliably restore images corrupted by stripe-like features. Our approach removes beam instability, ion mill curtaining, mechanical scratches, or any stripe features and remains robust at low signal-to-noise. The success of this approach is achieved by exploiting CS’s inability to recover directional structures that are highly localized and missing in Fourier Space.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)705-710
Number of pages6
JournalMicroscopy and Microanalysis
Volume25
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • FIB tomography
  • compressed sensing
  • destriping
  • electron microscopy
  • electron tomography

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