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Scintillation detectors

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Instrumentation Scintillation detectors Band theory of solids Outer electrons have energy levels that lie in a valence band Above valence band is conduction band – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Scintillation detectors


1
Instrumentation
  • Scintillation detectors
  • Band theory of solids
  • Outer electrons have energy levels that lie in a
    valence band
  • Above valence band is conduction band
  • Region between valence and conduction bands is
    the forbidden gap and represents electron
    energies that do not exist in a pure crystal. In
    a ground state, the valence band is completely
    filled with electrons the conduction band is
    empty. When energy is applied to the crystal,
    valence electrons are lifted to the conduction
    band. As electrons fall back to valence band,
    resultant energy is 350-550 nanometers-visible
    light.

2
Instrumentation
  • NaI crystal commonly used in NM
  • Hermetically sealed in aluminum (Al absorbs
    Alphas Betas)
  • Added Thallium impurities create luminesence
    centers in the forbidden zone.
  • 20-30 light photon produced per 1 keV of energy
    absorbed

3
Instrumentation
  • The light photons are converted to electrical
    signals in the PMTs

4
Instrumentation
  • Spectometry
  • Pulse height analysis
  • Refers to the use of a scintillation counting
    system to obtain an energy spectrum from a
    radioactive source
  • Simply a histogram of the pulse height which is
    proportional to the energy deposited in the
    crystal.
  • Spectrum has 2 major components Compton plateau
    and photopeak

5
Instrumentation
  • Compton plateau
  • broad range of energies produced by Compton
    scatter interactions in the crystal
  • Right side limit of plateau is the Compton
    edge-Compton interactions in which incoming x or
    gamma rayis backscatterd 180 degrees
  • Photopeak
  • Highest pulse height

6
Instrumentation
  • Resolution
  • Ability of a system to accurately depict two
    separate events in space, time or energy as
    separate events.
  • The amount by which the system smears out a
    single event space, time or energy.
  • The worse the energy resolution of a PHA, the
    broader the photopeak

7
Instrumentation
  • FWHM
  • Energy resolution can be quantified as the full
    width at half maximum of the photopeak.
  • Find the of counts at top of photopeak and then
    locating the points on either side of the peak
    where the counts are half of the peak counts. The
    width (at half max) is then divided by the pulse
    height (energy) at the apex of the photopeak and
    multiplied by 100 to produce an energy resolution
    measurement in percent

8
Instrumentation
  • FWHM
  • energy resolution(FWHM/photopeak center) x 100
  • The smaller the , the better the energy
    resolution
  • Typical values
  • Cs-137 7 - 9
  • Tc-99m 8- 12

9
Instrumentation
  • Spectometry systems are generally used to
    determine which radionuclides (and quantities)
    are present in a mixed sample.
  • A well counter assays radioactive samples in test
    tubes.
  • Lead-shielded NaI detector 1-3 inches in diameter

10
Instrumentation
  • Probe systems count radioactivity in people
  • Uses a flat field collimator-provides relatively
    uniform detection sensitivity across the region
    of the thyroid.

11
Instrumentation
  • Liquid Scintillation counting
  • Used to assess the activity of small sources of
    beta emitters (tritium-H-3 or C-14)
  • Radioactive samples dissolved in a liquid that
    scintillates
  • 3 components organic solvent (99), primary
    fluor, secondary fluor (wave length shifter)
  • Quenching refers to any undesirable reduction in
    light from the scintillation cocktail.

12
Instrumentation
  • Factors affecting count rate
  • Time
  • Efficiency
  • Geometry
  • Attenuation
  • Random decay

13
Instrumentation
  • Collimators
  • .5 in to 2 in thick lead
  • Lead between each hole is called the septum
  • Interface between patient and crystal
  • Discriminate based on direction of flight

14
Instrumentation
  • Parallel hole collimator
  • Array of parallel holes perpendicular to the
    crystal face
  • Presents a real-size image to the detector
  • Resolution is best at the collimator surface
  • Sensitivity independent of distance of source
    from collimator in most applications
  • Resolution degrades with increasing distance

15
Instrumentation
  • Converging collimators
  • Array of tapered holes that aim at a point some
    distance in front of the collimator (focal point)
  • Image presented to crystal is magnified
  • Best resolution at the surface of the collimator
  • Sensitivity increases as the source is moved from
    the camera face back to the focal plane and then
    decreases as it passes the focal plane

16
Instrumentation
  • Diverging collimators
  • upside down converging collimators
  • Array of tapered holes that diverge from a
    hypothetical focal point behind the crystal.
  • Image is minified
  • Useful for large organs

17
Instrumentation
  • Pinhole collimator
  • Thick, conical collimators with a single 2 to 5
    mm hole in the bottom center
  • Image gets smaller as the object is moved away
    from the pinhole collimator
  • Camera image is magnified from the collimator
    face to a distance equal to the length of the
    collimator

18
Instrumentation
  • Spatial Resolution
  • Reflects the systems ability to distinguish 2
    separate events
  • Quantified by FWHM
  • In practice, FWHM in mm will be nearly identical
    to the minimum distance by which 2 point or line
    sources must be separated to be distinguished as
    separate events.
  • Resolution can be increased by using many more
    smaller holes or making the collimator longer.

19
Instrumentation
  • Sensitivity
  • Is the overall ability of the system to detect
    the radioactive emissions from a source. The
    higher the sensitivity, the greater fraction of
    emissions are detected
  • Sensitivity can be increased by increasing the
    size or shortening the length of the holes.

20
Instrumentation
  • There is always a trade off between resolution
    and sensitivity.
  • Resolution Diameter (length distance/length)
  • Sensitivity (Diameter/length)2
    (diameter/diameter thickness)2
  • Geometric spatial resolution is one of several
    factors that influence actual spatial resolution
    in an image. Other factors include intrinsic
    camera resolution, collimator resolution,
    scatter, patient resolution effect.

21
Instrumentation
  • Crystals
  • The most common crystal used in Nuclear Medicine
    is Thallium activated NaI.
  • Thicker crystals increase the chance of a photon
    interaction (higher sensitivity) at the expense
    of a loss of resolution
  • 1/4 crystals have 1mm better intrinsic
    resolution than ½ crystals.
  • When counting Tc-99m, ¼ crystals have 15 less
    sensitivity than ½ crystals.
  • Need 3/8-1/2 crystals to effectively count
    gamma gt 200keV
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