Hi users,
I am trying to find the tortuosity of a material(3D) In x,y,z directions. 1)As a first step I skeletonized the pores. 2)I used analyze skeleton in imagej to get the vertexes and the edges. How do i identify the shortest path from this ? how do i draw all the possible paths in a graph and find the tortuosity distribution in all three directions? |
Check http://fiji.sc/wiki/index.php/AnalyzeSkeleton and a comment about
tortuosity within the Detailed Information section. Good luck, Prof. Sidnei Paciornik Grupo de Análise de Imagens e Microscopia Digital DEMa <http://www.dema.puc-rio.br/> - Departamento de Engenharia de Materiais PUC-Rio <http://www.puc-rio.br/> Rua Marquês de São Vicente 225 Prédio Leme, Sala 501L Gávea - Rio de Janeiro - RJ 22451-900 - Brasil tel: (55)(21)3527-1243 On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 2:56 PM, prasanthriver <[hidden email]>wrote: > Hi users, > > I am trying to find the tortuosity of a material(3D) In x,y,z directions. > > 1)As a first step I skeletonized the pores. > 2)I used analyze skeleton in imagej to get the vertexes and the edges. > > How do i identify the shortest path from this ? how do i draw all the > possible paths in a graph and find the tortuosity distribution in all > three > directions? > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://imagej.1557.x6.nabble.com/tortuosity-tp5004032.html > Sent from the ImageJ mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > -- > ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html > -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html |
In reply to this post by prasanthriver
I would suggest a different approach. Have a look at "Practical Methods for Measuring the Tortuosity of Porous Materials from Binary or Gray-Tone Tomographic Reconstructions", C.J. Gommes et.al.. AICHE Journal Vol. 55, No. 8. The iteration count for a 6 connected flooding kernel is used as an estimator for geodesic distance in the pore space. Dividing the resulting image by the Euclidean distance produces a tortuosity image. If you are flooding from the top slice to the bottom slice the Euclidean distance is simply the slice number.
If the image is sufficiently large and is a random network then the tortuosities should converge to a solution as distance increases from the seed point or seed plane (usually an image face). This process tends to overestimate the tortuosity but is still a useful metric. A plugin that does 6 connected 3D flood filling will work but you will need to modify it to report the iteration count. Regards, John D.
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In reply to this post by Sidnei Paciornik
3d fractal analysis???
________________________________ Da: Sidnei Paciornik <[hidden email]> A: [hidden email] Inviato: Venerdì 19 Luglio 2013 15:54 Oggetto: Re: tortuosity Check http://fiji.sc/wiki/index.php/AnalyzeSkeleton and a comment about tortuosity within the Detailed Information section. Good luck, Prof. Sidnei Paciornik Grupo de Análise de Imagens e Microscopia Digital DEMa <http://www.dema.puc-rio.br/> - Departamento de Engenharia de Materiais PUC-Rio <http://www.puc-rio.br/> Rua Marquês de São Vicente 225 Prédio Leme, Sala 501L Gávea - Rio de Janeiro - RJ 22451-900 - Brasil tel: (55)(21)3527-1243 On Fri, Jul 19, 2013 at 2:56 PM, prasanthriver <[hidden email]>wrote: > Hi users, > > I am trying to find the tortuosity of a material(3D) In x,y,z directions. > > 1)As a first step I skeletonized the pores. > 2)I used analyze skeleton in imagej to get the vertexes and the edges. > > How do i identify the shortest path from this ? how do i draw all the > possible paths in a graph and find the tortuosity distribution in all > three > directions? > > > > -- > View this message in context: > http://imagej.1557.x6.nabble.com/tortuosity-tp5004032.html > Sent from the ImageJ mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > -- > ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html > -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html |
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In reply to this post by Sidnei Paciornik
Hi Prof. Sidnei Paciornik,
I have read through it and it looks like it is a measure of 2d tortuosity and also it is a measure of distance (pixels)between the junction voxels and not the total number of pixels in the entire image Thanks, Prasanth |
In reply to this post by carlo bianco
Hi carlo bianco,
Can you attach some links of papers wheree i can take a look at the 3d fractla analysis?? Thanks, Prasanth |
In reply to this post by Sidnei Paciornik
Hi everybody,
is the analyzeskeleton plugin also valid for 2D images? How can I have a number expressing tortuosity starting from the Euclidean distance number? Is there any range expressing for example 0 = low grade of tortuosity 1= high grade of tortuosity? Thanks a lot Matilde |
HI,
Where you able to find answer of your question. |
In reply to this post by prasanthriver
Hi,
I am facing the same problem and I need to calculate the tortuosity of en entire ceramic bead of 3mm of diameter, did you get any solution to the problem? Thanks in advance, Alejandra -- Sent from: http://imagej.1557.x6.nabble.com/ -- ImageJ mailing list: http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/list.html |
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