posted on 2024-12-20, 17:00authored byJannis N. Ahlers, Konstantin M. Pavlov, Marcus J. Kitchen, Stephanie A. Harker, Emily J. Pryor, James A. Pollock, Michelle K. Croughan, Ying Ying How, Marie-Christine Zdora, Lucy F. Costello, Dylan W. O'Connell, Christopher Hall, Kaye S. Morgan
X-ray dark-field imaging visualises scattering from sample microstructure, and has found application in medical and security contexts. While most X-ray dark-field imaging techniques rely on masks, gratings, or crystals, recent work on the Fokker--Planck model of diffusive imaging has enabled dark-field imaging in the propagation-based geometry. Images captured at multiple propagation distances or X-ray energies can be used to reconstruct dark-field from propagation-based images but have previously required multiple exposures. Here, we show single-exposure dark-field imaging by exploiting the harmonic content in a monochromatised synchrotron beam and utilising an energy-discriminating photon-counting detector to capture dual-energy propagation-based images. The method is validated by filming time-varying samples, showing the advantage of the dark-field contrast in analysing dynamic evolution. We measure and adjust for the impact of detector charge-sharing on the images. This work opens the way for low-dose and dynamic dark-field X-ray imaging without the need for a high-stability set-up and precision optics.