The present invention relates to a cascaded ionizing radiation converter for diagnostic imaging, usable in medical diagnostic devices and RTG scanners for air luggage inspection.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,368,386A discloses an image conversion device comprising a thick plate of photoconductive material being bismuth oxide, or a mixture of the latter with germanium or silicon oxide, characterized by high resistivity on lack of radiation and high photoconductivity. The said layer absorbs ionizing radiation, e.g. X-rays. The device further comprises a liquid crystal layer having nematic phase wherein the image is displayed, and power supply electrodes. Introduction of appropriate admixtures to the device allows for reading out information via white light since the absorption of this radiation is significantly reduced by the photoconductive material layer.
Scientific publication by P. Rieppo, B. Bahadur, J. Rowlands, titled “Amorphous selenium liquid crystal light valve for x-ray imaging,” Proc. SPIE 2432, Medical Imaging 1995: Physics of Medical Imaging, 228 (May 8, 1995), discloses equipment amplifying the x-ray image, comprising the layer absorbing Roentgen radiation, the image creation layer, and an amplifier stage. The device is based on a photoconductive x-ray detector creating the image. The said photoconductive detector comprises twisted nematic liquid crystal cells embedded in an amorphous selenium layer. Further on, the device comprises a polarizer which changes the intensity of the light transmitted by the whole structure. A CCD camera records the optical image and transmits it to the processor where it is subjected to digital processing and then displayed. The whole system, except for the image registering layer comprising liquid crystal cells with selenium layer, requires additionally a light source and a CCD camera to record. This fact determines the lack of compactness of the devices and increases both its production and operation costs.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,687,792, in turn, presents a digital system for X-ray diagnostic. The device is built of a photoconductive detector and an electro-optic modulator. The photoconductive detector layer absorbs x-rays that have passed through the examined object forming an exposure of the object stored in the electro-optic light modulator. In the embodiment of the patent referred to above, the photoconductive detector layer is amorphous selenium adjacent to the electro-optic modulator layer comprising liquid crystals. So created x-ray image is stable for a few minutes and can be digitized using a scanning system or a CCD camera. The said device records static images and does not allow for live preview. Furthermore, recording of the next image requires application of an erasing signal in the form of visible light of predefined range.
On the other hand, U.S. Pat. No. 5,847,499, presents a device generating x-ray images, comprising an x-ray radiation source, an x-ray detector consisting of a photoconductive layer of amorphous selenium of thickness from 50 to 500 pm, and an electro-optic modulator in the form of a liquid crystal cell. Furthermore, the device comprises a non-actinic (not exposing the photoconductive layer) light source in order to create optical representation of the exposed x-ray image, and an image converter receiving the image projected by means of non-actinic light, and a processor coupled with the imager in order to store and process the images. The said device comprises additional elements, like the second radiation source, the image converter or the processor, which makes it structurally complicated and therefore expensive in production and operation.
From U.S. Pat. No. 5,929,449, a thin-film, flat detection panel in the form of a pixelated matrix is known, serving as a real-time digital imager and dosimeter for diagnostic or x rays or gamma rays. It includes a plurality of photodiodes made of hydrogenated amorphous silicon placed upon a glass substrate. The key element of the said device is the layer converting x-ray or gamma rays into electric field, being a selenium layer of 300-500 μm thick. The electric field generated in the converting switches the TFT transistor of the corresponding pixel, thus creating a two-dimensional picture. The application of the selenium layer with the thickness of up to 0.5 mm poses a technological challenge and additionally reduces the transparency of the whole device, thus limiting the detection sensitivity. What's more, the process of depositing such a thick selenium layer can lead to formation of re-crystallites in the layer, which is a parasitic phenomenon due to the generation of dark current.
The technological problem faced by the present invention is to propose such a structure of the ionizing radiation converter and the x-ray imaging device that will use fewer components, will allow for real time imaging and readout with a naked eye, in transmission and reflection mode, will be transparent for visible light, will increase x-ray detection sensitivity, and limit the x-ray energy necessary for effective imaging, thus reducing the negative effects of this radiation upon the patient. Unexpectedly, the technical problems mentioned above have been solved by the present invention.
The first object of the present invention is an cascaded ionizing radiation converter, comprising the first conversion stage, transforming ionizing radiation into non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation, the second conversion stage transforming non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation into an electrical charge, and the third conversion stage transforming the generated electric charge into the change of potential controlling the liquid crystal cell, characterized in that the first conversion stage is a radioluminescent layer, preferably Lu2O3:Eu layer, the second conversion stage is a photoconductive material layer, preferably amorphous selenium or poly(3-hexylthiophene) layer, wherein the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation emission spectrum of the first conversion stage is the same as the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation absorption spectrum of the second conversion stage. Preferably, the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation emission spectrum of the first conversion stage comprises visible radiation. Equally preferably, the radioluminescent layer thickness of the first conversion stage is within 100-200 μm. In another favorable embodiment of the present invention, the photoconductive material layer thickness is within 100-200 nm.
The second object of the present invention is an imaging diagnostic apparatus using ionizing radiation, having hybrid structure comprising the upper transparent layer made of a polymer, then the upper electrode layer, and, in sequence, the first conversion stage converting the ionizing radiation into non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation, the second conversion stage transforming non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation into an electrical charge, and the third conversion stage transforming the generated electric charge into the change of potential controlling the liquid crystal cell, then a polyimide layer, the lower electrode layer, and the lower transparent layer of polymer or glass, characterized in that the first conversion stage is a radioluminescent layer, preferably Lu2O3:Eu layer, the second conversion stage is a photoconductive material layer, preferably amorphous selenium or poly(3-hexylthiophene) layer, wherein the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation emission spectrum of the first conversion stage is the same as the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation absorption spectrum of the second conversion stage. Preferably, the non-ionizing electromagnetic radiation emission spectrum of the first conversion stage comprises visible radiation. Equally preferably, the radioluminescent layer thickness of the first conversion stage is within 100-200 μm. In another favorable embodiment of the present invention, the photoconductive material layer thickness is within 100-200 nm. In another preferable embodiment of the present invention, the upper electrode layer and the lower electrode layer are made of indium-tin oxide (ITO).
The cascaded ionizing radiation converter according to the present invention and the apparatus for imaging diagnostic using the cascaded ionizing radiation converter are characterized with simple structure limiting the number of components used, wherein the allow for real time imaging and results readout with a naked eye in transmission and reflection mode, they are transparent for visible light, and due to the application of direct conversion, the thickness of the first and the second conversion stage layers was reduced which positively influenced the ionizing radiation detection sensitivity and reduced the amount of ionizing radiation energy necessary for effective imaging, contributing to the limitation of the harmful effects of the said radiation upon the patient.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention have been presented in the drawings, wherein
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PL408391 | Jun 2014 | PL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/PL2015/050018 | 5/25/2015 | WO | 00 |