Abstract

High-resolution digital rock micro-CT images captured from a wide field of view are essential for various geosystem engineering and geoscience applications. However, the resolution of these images is often constrained by the capabilities of scanners. To overcome this limitation and achieve superior image quality, advanced deep learning techniques have been used. This study compares four different super-resolution techniques, including super-resolution convolutional neural network (SRCNN), efficient sub-pixel convolutional neural networks (ESPCN), enhanced deep residual neural networks (EDRN), and super-resolution generative adversarial networks (SRGAN) to enhance the resolution of micro-CT images obtained from heterogeneous porous media. Our investigation employs a dataset consisting of 5000 micro-CT images acquired from a highly heterogeneous carbonate rock. The performance of each algorithm is evaluated based on its accuracy to reconstruct the pore geometry and connectivity, grain-pore edge sharpness, and preservation of petrophysical properties, such as porosity. Our findings indicate that EDRN outperforms other techniques in terms of the peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and structural similarity (SSIM) index, increased by nearly 4 dB and 17%, respectively, compared to bicubic interpolation. Furthermore, SRGAN exhibits superior performance compared to other techniques in terms of the learned perceptual image patch similarity (LPIPS) index and porosity preservation error. SRGAN shows a nearly 30% reduction in LPIPS compared to bicubic interpolation. Our results provide deeper insights into the practical applications of these techniques in the domain of porous media characterizations, facilitating the selection of optimal super-resolution CNN-based methodologies.

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