How to distinguish each fiber and analyze the properties of the fiber?

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Hello everyone,
I am currently trying to develop a code to analyze each fiber using the Image Processing Toolbox. The image I am working with is a microscopic image of the cross section of the fiber. I tried thresholding the image, but since the single fibers have shades of light, it is extremely difficult for Matlab to distinctly define the individual fibers. The background(empty space) is also bright so there is no real distinction between parts of the fiber and the background space. When I converted the colorimg to a grayscale then to a binaryimg, the binaryimg was not recognizing the each single fiber. I am just wondering if there is a more efficent approach to analyzing this img?
The other way I believe I can alleviate this problem is if I dye the fibers so there is a better distiction between the fiber and the background light.
Thanks in advance to who helps!
Richard
  6 comentarios
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 9 de Sept. de 2013
Wait, so is your original data greyscale, and you have false-colored it to gold?
Richard
Richard el 9 de Sept. de 2013
No that gold colored image is the original image. I thought tried using greyscale/thresholding to get a better distinction, but that was not the case due to the shading in the image.

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Respuestas (2)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 9 de Sept. de 2013
Of course if you can get a background that is not in the black to gold/yellow spectrum you will get more contrast and be able to segment these better. For example, something in the greenish/bluish hue range (a hue diametrically opposite gold). In addition, is it possible to separate the fibers so that they aren't touching? It's always better to start with a good image than to try to fix up a bad one post-acquisition.
  4 comentarios
Richard
Richard el 10 de Sept. de 2013
I think you're absolutely right Image Analyst. The main problem is the image itself, but I am quite limited on how I can acquire the image. I believe in this particular image I was using an optical microscope at 40x. As for the fibers touching, there isn't much I can do to prevent that because of the actual slide mechanism we use to situate the fiber. Basically the fibers are placed into a slit vertically(so if the slide is horizontal [-- imagine the two dashes are the two parts of the slide] and the fibers are placed vertically into the slide -|- Then the fiber is cut horizontally so it is even with the slide, but the only way the fibers stay in the slit is if they are compressed inside the slit. I, too, believe that it is too complicated to evaluate images acquired from the optical microscope, but I guess I still wanted to make a decent attempt with the capabilities of Matlab to see just how complicated this image would be.
However when it comes to the background distinction/gold hue, that is basically the light emitting from the microscope bulb that is that golden color. I would not be able to manipulate the color of the backround, but I can try to dye the actual fibers. In this particular case, the polymer that was used for the fiber is quite translucent, but we are able to dye the actual polymer during fiber processing so maybe that would be a better route? Because then the fiber is colored and the background would be the golden color. The only problem will be that there will be some fibers touching.
The other method I believe is that I would just have to use a scanning electron microscope. This would alleviate the fibers touching and will produce better images overall.
Thank you Image Analyst for the help!
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 10 de Sept. de 2013
Sounds like consultation with a professional microscopist would be helpful. SEM images are often even more difficult to analyze than optical images because of the monochrome, perspective/3D, shadowed nature of them, but maybe if you're looking at just cross sections it mgiht be okay.

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Muthu Annamalai
Muthu Annamalai el 10 de Sept. de 2013
Have you tried a auto-correlation and counting the peaks? This could easily give you the number of fibers, since they all resemble each other.

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