Title: X-Ray Production
1X-Ray Production
- BMP 205
- Lecture 3
- Mike McNitt-Gray Ph.D.
- Some images scanned from A.B. Wolbarst, Physics
of Radiology - Bushberg et. al., Essential Physics of Medical
Imaging
2OutlineCh 5 of Bushberg
- X-ray Production
- Tube
- Anatomy
- Operation
- Generator
- Function
- Waveform
- Beam Production
- Quality
- Quantity
- Heat
3X-Rays
- Discovered by Wilhelm Roentgen 1895
4X-Rays
- Do occur naturally
- All medical X-ray generated by machine
- With X-ray Tube and High Voltage Generator
- Conversion of Electrical Energy to
Electromagnetic Radiation
5X-ray Production
- Fancy lightbulb high voltage vacuum tube
- Cathode e- source and Anode target
- electrons accelerated (high voltage) across
vacuum - Suddenly decelerated (smacked) into high Z target
- Conservation of Energy Electron kinetic energy
(1/2mv2) converted into heat and E-M Radiation - (1 efficient)
6X-Ray production (e- bombardment of high Z
target)
7X-Rays
- Bremsstrahlung
- Characteristic
8Bremsstrahlung Production
9Bremsstrahlung Spectrum
10Characteristic Production
11Binding Energies
units keV
12Total Spectrum
13X-ray Tube
14X-Ray Tubes (Inserts)
15Vacuum enclosure
- Vacuum enclosure pyrex glass or grounded Al
- High vacuum no air molecules to impede or cause
secondary ionizations - insulator and or grounded for high voltage
applications - able to handle high temperatures and thermal
expansion
16Siemens Straton Tube for CT
17Siemens Straton Tube for CT
18Siemens Straton Tube for CT
19kV, mA, mAs
- kV a measure of the voltage applied across the
tube (from the anode to the cathode) - mA the measure of electron flow from cathode to
anode (e.g., tube current) - mAs time integrated tube current
20Generator Console
21X-ray Beam kV and mAs
- mA or mAs
- affects quantity of x-rays
- kV
- Affects x-ray beam energy and penetrability
(quality) - Also affects efficiency of production (quantity)
22Basic Operation
- Cathode is source of electrons
- Heat up a filament, which emits electrons
(thermionic emission) - Electrons liberated from filament flow through
the vacuum of tube when a positive voltage is
applied to anode (wrt cathode) - Adjustments in filament current change
temperature of filament to control tube current - Electrons hitting anode produce bremmstrahlung
and ..????
23Cathode
24Focusing Cup Bias
Grid controlled tubes can pinch off the electron
flow.
25Space Charge Effect
- thermionic emission results in an electron cloud
(space charge) - sufficiently large cloud gt repel further
emissions
26Space Charge Effect
- Applied high voltage across the tube
- tube current flows no cloud buildup
- no repelling of further emissions
- Accelerates electrons from cathode to anode
- Emission versus space charge limited output
- voltage dependent
27Space Charge Limited Output
28X-Ray Tube Anode
- High Z related to efficiency of X-ray
production - Tungsten (W) Z74
- high melting point 3370? C
- reasonably good heat conductor
- alloy w/ Rhenium (10) for structural strength
29Anode
- Two Types
- Stationary
- Rotating
- Rotating anodes prevent heat buildup
- 1 energy converted into x-rays (heat)
- rotating anode prevents heating 1 spot
continuously
30Stationary Anode
31Anode Rotating
- Rotating higher heat capacity
- greater surface area
- 3600 10000 rpm
- stator/rotor induction motor
- Molybdenum stem
32Anode and Focal Spot
33Anode Angle and Field Coverage
34Line Focus Principle
- Problem of competing needs
- Want small focal spot for high resolution
(penumbra) - Want large focal spot for high heat capacity
- due to low efficiency of X-ray production
35Line Focus Principle
- Angled anode face (12 - 20 degrees) allows
- larger actual focal spot size
- smaller effective focal spot size
- Decreasing angle
- decreases heat capacity but
- increases resolution
36Anode Heel Effect
37Anode Heel Effect
e-
cathode
anode
Higher Intensity Softer Beam larger apparent
size
Lower Intensity Harder Beam smaller apparent
size
38Anode Heel Effect
- Intensity gradient from self absorbtion of anode
(heel) - As great as 30 along anode-cathode
- Anode side smaller apparent fs, harder beam,
lower intensity - put thicker/denser anatomy at cathode end
- becomes more pronounced with
- short SID
- large field size
- small anode angle
39Adjustable Collimator with light localizer
Coincidence of light x-ray field
40Generator
- Heart and Brain of X-ray System
41X-Ray Generators
- Converts electrical power from building
electrical grid into form that can be used by
X-ray Tube - All grid regulated to 60Hz Alternating Current
- Single phase supply 110 Volt AC
- Three phase 220 Volt
42Tube requirements
- Needs DC (is in fact a vacuum tube diode)
- Can only conduct in one direction
- cathode negative with respect to anode
- Because of thermionic emission
- Therefore need rectifiers convert AC to DC
- Need high voltage for X-ray production
- ½ mv2 into h?
- 110 Volts vs 110 thousand volts
- Therefore need transformers (changes voltage)
43Transformer
44Single Phase
453 Phase
46Voltage Ripple
47I a kVp2
48One vs. Three Phases
49Other generators
- Battery storage
- Capacitor discharge
- Constant potential gradient (CPG)
- Tetrodes (high voltage vacuum tubes) control kV
and exposure time directly on high voltage side - Flat waveform but expensive
- High freq nearly as good
50Summary
- Production
- Bremsstrahlung and Characteristic
- Quality and Quantity
- Tube and Generator
- Operation
- Imaging
51Additional Detail Slides
52Transformers
- Two separate coils of wire wrapped around closed
core - Many configurations
- Electrical supply connected to 1?
- Output device to 2?
- Step up or step down
53Laws of Transformers
- 1) Voltage in two circuits proportional to number
of turns in the two coils - 2) Power (Energy) is conserved
- As Power (watts) is voltage x current
- Therefore as voltage increases by turns ratio,
current decreases
54Bushberg
55Autotransformer
- Unique single winding design
- Self inductive
- 1? 2? defined by number of turns enclosed by
taps - Variable number of turns from taps allows voltage
control at relatively low potential - Feeds primary of high voltage transformer and
filament transformer - Can be both step up and down
56Filament circuit
- Step down transformer drops voltage
- 10 V _at_ 3-5 A
- Filament current (A) indirectly controls tube
current (and output X-ray intensity)
57High Voltage Circuit
- Step up transformer
- gt 500 fold voltage increase
- Immersed in dielectric
- Secondary side of autotransformer
- Fixed of transformer windings
- Grounded at center (mA meter)
- So for 100 kVp, potential on one side is 50,000
V other is 50,000 V - Less of an insulation problem
58Rectification
- Converts AC (needed by transformer) to DC (needed
by tube) - Conduct current in one direction only
- Vacuum tubes (old style) large, bulky, and
burnout - Solid state semiconductor diodes
- Made of N-P semiconductors
- Conduct only on forward bias
59Diode Bridge (Wheatstone bridge)
- Four diode arrangement to allow current to flow
in one direction through tube regardless of
polarity of secondary side of high tension
transformer - Full wave rectified generator
- 2x as efficient as self (half) wave rectified
- But inefficient compared to high freq CPG
generators
60Generator Efficiency
- Single Phase 100 ripple w/ half or full wave
rectified - High voltage varies between 0 and max
- For single phase, average voltage is R.M.S.
61Three phase generators
- Recall AC power avail. in 3?
- 3 voltage peaks per 1/60 sec
- 3?, 6 pulse
- High volt transform rectify
- 13.5 ripple
- 3?, 12 pulse
- 2 different winding config on 2
- Delta and wye
- Another 30 phase shift for 2 halves of output,
peaks fill troughs - 3.5 voltage ripple
62Medium/High Frequency
- Transformer efficiency V ?NA
- By increasing frequency, cross sectional area
reduced for same power (50kW in tube head!) - Frequency of invertor ranges from 5-100 kHz!
- Feedback loop controlled during exposure if kV
drops off, increase invertor frequency kV
increases - Timer accuracy
- Shorter exposures
- (lt10 ms)
63(No Transcript)
64Generator Type / High Voltage Waveform
65Tube Limits Rating Charts
- Tube insert has power/load limit
- Function of heat produced in exposure
- HU kVp x mA x time x correction factor
- single phase generator less efficient
- Correction factor cpg generator 1.4
- 70 kVp x 100 mA x 0.1 sec 700 HU (single phase)
- Joules watts x seconds
- 1 W 1 V x 1 A 1000 V x 0.001 A keV x mA!
- assume constant voltage, so divide by correction
factor! - 70 kVp / 1.4 x 100 mA x 0.1 sec 500 J (single
phase) - For cpg is 700 Joules
66Question What is highest kVp can safely use to
get 35 mAs (350 mA 100ms)?
67Question What is highest kVp can safely use to
get 35 mAs (350 mA 100ms)? Answer Should not
exceed 100 kVp
68Falling Load
- Integrates area under tube rating curve
- Applies highest mA in shortest time, reduces mA
as exposure continues - Expensive, not used as much with todays high
output tubes
69Generator Efficiency Implications
- Single phase seldom at peak voltage, so set
higher kVp - Three phase higher average kVp
- Less ripple means more mR/mAs (shorter exposure
time) - 5 mR/mAs single vs. 10 mR/mAs three phase
- Ripple based on some multiple of 60 Hz
- High frequency more common now, smaller and
cheaper than CPG
70Generator Power Rating
- Tube power handling should match generator output
- Rated in kilowatts under load (kVp x mA) _at_ 100
kVp - 80 kW generator can produce 800 mA at 100 kVp
(simultaneously) - Polydoros 80s, Medio CP80
- Small clinic may have 20kW, 200 mA at most
- Angio/Cardio generators 100 kW and greater
- CT not necessarily high instantaneous, but tube
and generator sustain for long periods