X-Ray Production
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Transcript X-Ray Production
CT
X-Ray
Production
George David
Associate Professor
The Atomic Nucleus
Protons
+ Charges
# protons = atomic # (Z)
+
+
+
Neutrons
~
No charge
~
~
Mass about the same as proton
Atomic Weight(mass)= # protons + # neutrons
Orbital Electrons
Electrons
- charges
very small mass compared with protons /
neutrons
Electrons reside only at certain energy levels or
Shells
Designations start at K shell
K shell closest to nucleus
L shell next closest
Shells proceed up from K, L, M, N, etc.
Except for K shell, all shells contain sub-shells
L
K
-
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
Binding Energy
energy required to remove orbital
electron from atom
Negative electrons attracted to
positive nucleus
more binding energy for shells closer
to nucleus
K shell has highest binding force
higher atomic # materials (higher Z)
result in more binding energy
more positive charge in nucleus
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
Electron Shells (cont.)
Electrons can only reside in a shell
electron has exactly the energy associated with its
shell
electrons attempt to reside in lowest available
energy shell
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
The Shell Game
*
Electrons can move from shell to shell
to move to higher energy shell requires energy
input equal to difference between shells
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
-
Requires
energy
input!
The Shell Game (cont.)
to move to a lower energy shell requires the
release of energy equal to the difference
between shells
characteristic x-rays
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
Energy
released -
-
Output X-Ray Beam
Producing X-Rays
Electrons emitted by filament
Electrons slam into target
Reminder
Electrons carry their energy as kinetic energy
Energy of motion
+
Requirements to Produce X-Rays
Filament Voltage
High Voltage
anode
+
high
voltage
source
filament
filament
voltage
source
X-Ray Production(cont.)
X-Rays are produced in
the x-ray tube by two
distinct processes
Characteristic
radiation
Bremsstrahlung
Output Beam Spectrum
Output photon beam made up of
Characteristic Radiation
characteristic of target material
several discrete energies
#
Energy
Bremsstrahlung
continuous range of energies
0 - kVp setting
most photons have low energy
Spectrum
#
depicts fraction of beam at each energy value
combination of Bremsstrahlung and
characteristic radiation
Energy
Characteristic Radiation
Interaction of high speed incident
electron with orbital electron of
target
#1: orbital electron removed from
atom
#2: electrons from higher energy
shells cascade
down to fill vacancies
L
K
-
#3: characteristic x-ray emitted
+
~
+
~
#1
+
-
#2
~
-
#3
Characteristic Radiation
Consists only of discrete x-ray
energies corresponding to
energy difference between
electron shells of target
Specific energies are
characteristic of target
material
for tungsten 59 keV
corresponds to the difference
in energy between K and L
shells
#
Energy
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
Bremsstrahlung
interaction of moving electron with nucleus of target
atoms
Positive nucleus causes moving electron to change speed /
direction
Kinetic energy lost
Emitted in form of Bremsstrahlung x-ray
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
Bremsstrahlung (cont.)
Bremsstrahlung means braking radiation
Moving electrons have many Bremsstrahlung
reactions
small amount of energy lost with each
L
K
~ +
~ +
+ ~
-
-
Bremsstrahlung (cont.)
Energy lost by moving electron is random & depends on
distance from nucleus
charge (Z) of nucleus
Bremsstrahlung Energy Spectrum
0 - peak kilovoltage (kVp) applied to x-ray tube
most x-ray photons low energy
lowest energy photons don’t escape tube
easily filtered by tube enclosures or added filtration
#
Energy
Beam Intensity
Product of
# photons in beam
energy per photon
Units
Roentgens (R) per unit time
Measure of ionization rate of air
Depends on
kVp
mA
target material
filtration
Intensity & Technique
beam intensity proportional to mA
beam Intensity ~ proportional to kVp2
+
high
voltage
source
filament
voltage
source
keV = kilo-electron volt
energy of an electron
Kinetic energy
Higher energy electron moves
faster
Electrons can be manipulated by
electric fields
Accelerated
Steered
+
*
kVp = kilovolts peak
peak kilovoltage applied across x-
ray tube
kVp
Time
kVp
kVp corresponds to maximum photon energy in beam
spectrum
kVp affects quality (spectrum) & quantity of x-rays
produced
energy spectrum changed
subject contrast changes
higher kVp reduces subject contrast
#
-------- Higher kVp
Energy
mA
mA affects only quantity of x-rays
does not affect
quality
spectrum
#
-------- Higher mA
Energy
X-Ray Technique
Kilovoltage [peak] (kV or [kVp])
maximum high voltage applied between
cathode & anode
Exposure time
Length of time high voltage is applied
Milliamps (mA)
see following slides
kVp
77
mA
200
time
.040
Tube Current (mA)
rate of
electron flow from filament to target
Measured in milliamperes (mA)
mA controlled primarily by filament voltage
increasing filament voltage / current results in
increased
filament temperature
emission of electrons
+
Tube Rating Chart
Indicates load limit for tube
Maximum time for given kVp & mA
Maximum time depends upon
Rate at which heat generated
kVp
mA
Speed of rotating anode
Anode characteristics
See next slide
Anode Characteristics
Tube heat ratings depend
upon surface area of
tungsten bombarded by
electrons
focal spot size (apparent)
target angle
anode diameter
+
Actual FS
Apparent FS
Typical Single-Exposure Tube
Rating Chart
• shows maximum exposure time for
single exposure at given kV & mA
Example
• What is the maximum exposure time at
90 kVp & 300 mA?
Example
• What is the maximum exposure time at
120 kVp & 400 mA?
Can’t do 120 kVp at 400 mA
for any exposure time.
?
Tube Anode Damage
Single exposure heat capacity exceeded
melted spots on anode
Anode Thermal Characteristics Chart
2 charts in one
cooling curve in
absence of
heating
anode heating
for continuous
heat input
(Spiral CT)
Cooling
Start on cooling
curve with current
heat units
100,000 heat units in this
example
Cool for
2 minutes
x
x
2 minutes
The Many Ways Tubes Die
Warning
Tube Anode Damage
thermal shock (high mA on cold anode)
can cause in cracks in anode (tube death)
Tube warm-up
eliminates thermal shock from high mA
exposures on cold anode
warm-up needed whenever tube cold
once in the morning not sufficient if tube not used
for several hours
High Voltage Arcs
electrons move from filament to tube housing instead of to
anode
can be caused by filament evaporation
deposition of filament on glass envelope as result of high filament
currents or filament boost time
very short exposure with instantaneously very high mA
Generator often drops off line
+
arcing
Tube Insert Damage
Bearing Damage
prevents proper rotation of anode
Anode can
run too slow
stop
results in thermal damage to anode (melted
spots)
Anode not running at design speed
Filament breaks
renders one focal spot completely inoperative
Oil Leaks
May be accompanied by air bubble in housing
Eventually causes high voltage arcing
Requires immediate service attention