Article | REF: MED201 V1

X-ray medical imaging. X-ray detectors.

Author: Thierry LEMOINE

Publication date: March 10, 2015 | Lire en français

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    Overview

    ABSTRACT

    This article starts with the description of materials used for the detection of X-ray photons (scintillators and photoconductors). It then focuses on X-ray detectors themselves, from film, CR cassettes and the X-ray image intensifier to new digital technologies such as slot scan linear detectors, techniques such as TDI and CCD, and now flat panel detectors.

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    AUTHOR

    • Thierry LEMOINE: Technical Director THALES MICROWAVE & IMAGING SUBSYSTEMS, Vélizy, France

     INTRODUCTION

    Unlike sources, X-ray detectors have evolved significantly since the 1980s, following the path taken by digital photography with a decade's delay: time enough for manufacturers to find an economically viable technological solution to the problem of the large size of these detectors – up to 43 × 43 cm. Since around 2000, it has become clear that the future belongs to flat digital detectors, which today use a glass slab supporting amorphous silicon electronics, the same technology used in televisions and PC screens. The LCD screen industry has made this technology available for professional applications, and since around 2010, flat-panel digital detectors have ceased to be confined to high-end equipment, and are gradually making their mark on all X-ray modalities.

    This article takes a look at the technologies used to produce detectors. The first section explains how the materials (photoconductors and scintillators) that transform X-rays into a signal readable by an electronic device (an electrical charge or a light signal) work: a key factor in detector performance is the performance of these materials. The reader will then be introduced to the operating principle of the detectors themselves, classified into major families whose main characteristics are described, along with a few orders of magnitude of the performance available. Older technologies such as photographic film, still in use today and used by many practising radiologists, will not be overlooked, but –and – will also cover all other techniques, ending with the most recent, flat digital detectors.

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    KEYWORDS

    detectors   |   X-ray detectors   |   X-ray   |   X-ray imaging


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