Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an isolation transformer to be used under a high voltage, and an X-ray generating apparatus and a radiography system each including the isolation transformer.
Description of the Related Art
In general, an X-ray generating apparatus includes an X-ray generating tube configured to generate an X-ray by irradiating a target with an electron beam flux emitted from an electron gun, a tube voltage generating device configured to apply a high voltage between an anode and a cathode of the X-ray generating tube, and a drive device for the electron gun. Further, there has been known a mono-tank X-ray generating apparatus in which those respective members are disposed in a container. The mono-tank X-ray generating apparatus may be applied to a portable X-ray generating apparatus and is advantageous in size reduction.
Meanwhile, the drive device for the electron gun includes an isolation transformer configured to transform a voltage of a drive signal from a power source located outside of the X-ray generating apparatus into a cathode potential reference. A primary side of the isolation transformer is close to a ground potential and a secondary side thereof substantially has a cathode potential. Thus, the isolation transformer is required to have a high breakdown voltage.
In order to reduce the X-ray generating apparatus in size, the isolation transformer is required to be reduced in size. As one solution for this, there is an isolation transformer using a toroidal core. In Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. H11-74135, as a technology for providing a high-voltage isolation transformer using a toroidal core, there is disclosed a structure in which a core is covered by a resin case and coils are wound around the core and the resin case, thereby increasing breakdown voltages of the core and the resin case.
An insulating liquid is generally filled into the X-ray generating apparatus in order to ensure an internal breakdown voltage and cool the X-ray generating tube. The X-ray generating apparatus is filled with an insulating liquid as follows: the X-ray generating tube and other necessary devices are housed in a container, and the container is then evacuated. When the isolation transformer of Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. H11-74135 is applied to such an X-ray generating apparatus, gas bubbles may be trapped in the resin case due to an insulating liquid permeating into the resin case during the insulating liquid filling. In general, as the insulating liquid, a mineral oil that has a higher dielectric constant than gas bubbles (air) is used. Thus, if gas bubbles are trapped in the resin case of the isolation transformer, an electric field tends to be concentrated on the gas bubbles, resulting in a reduction in breakdown voltages of portions in which the gas bubbles remain. As a result, reliability of the apparatus is reduced in terms of driving of the electron gun.
The present invention is directed to realizing both size reduction and increase in breakdown voltage of a high-voltage isolation transformer to be used in an insulating liquid in an X-ray generating apparatus, and to providing a highly-reliable X-ray generating apparatus and a radiography system using the apparatus.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided an isolation transformer, including: an annular core; one coil wound around the annular core; a first container housing the annular core and the one coil, the first container having an annular shape and an insulating property; a first lead-out line pair that is connected to the one coil and is extracted outside the first container; another coil wound around the first container; and a second lead-out line pair connected to the other coil, the isolation transformer being disposed in an insulating liquid, the first container having formed therein a first opening through which the insulating liquid flows.
According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided an X-ray generating apparatus, including: an X-ray generating tube housed in a container; and a drive device configured to drive the X-ray generating tube, in which a surplus space in the container is filled with an insulating liquid, and in which the drive device includes the isolation transformer of the first aspect of the present invention in the container.
According to a third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a radiography system, including: an X-ray generating apparatus; an X-ray detecting apparatus configured to detect an X-ray emitted from the X-ray generating tube and transmitted through an object to be examined (hereinafter simply referred to as “object”); and a control apparatus configured to control the X-ray generating apparatus and the X-ray detecting apparatus in a coordinated manner.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
Now, exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described in detail with reference to the attached drawings, but the present invention is not limited to these embodiments. In addition, a known or well-known technology in the art is applied to a part that is not particularly illustrated or described in this specification. Further, in the drawings to be referred to below, the same numeral or symbol denotes the same component.
[Isolation Transformer]
The isolation transformer of the present invention is supposed to be used in an X-ray generating apparatus, and employs an annular core (toroidal core, hereinafter referred to as “core”) 2 in terms of a size reduction and a conversion efficiency. As shown in
A first container 5 is an insulating container having an annular hollow part, and the core 2 is housed in the annular hollow part of the first container 5 together with the one coil 3 so that the inner periphery of the first container 5 and the inner periphery of the core 2 overlie each other. Another coil 7 is wound around the first container 5 and is electrically connected to a second lead-out line pair 8. In the present invention, one of the one coil 3 and the other coil 7 is a primary coil and the other thereof is a secondary coil, and any of the coils may be the primary coil. Note that, in the isolation transformer of the present invention, the primary coil on the input side has a low potential and the secondary coil on the output side has a negative high potential when the isolation transformer is used in the X-ray generating apparatus. Thus, it is preferred that the one coil 3 closer to the core 2 be used as the primary coil closer to a ground potential. Accordingly, the following description is made with the one coil 3 being the primary coil and the other coil 7 being the secondary coil.
Enameled wires are generally used as the primary coil 3 and the secondary coil 7. When the primary coil 3 has a low potential and the secondary coil 7 has a negative high potential, the core 2 has a potential close to that of the primary coil 3, which is wound therearound more closely to the core 2 than the secondary coil 7. Thus, the first container 5 is required to isolate the core 2 and the secondary coil 7 from each other at a high voltage. As an insulating material forming the first container 5, ceramics and resin are exemplified. Resin is especially preferred in terms of weight, processability, and costs, and polyether ether ketone (PEEK), acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), polybutylene terephthalate (PBT), an epoxy resin, a fluorine-based resin, or the like can be used.
Further, in order to house the annular core 2, the first container 5 is formed of two combined members 5a and 5b. At this time, a clearance between the members 5a and 5b is weak in dielectric strength, and hence the members 5a and 5b are combined by fitting in an axial direction of the core 2, thereby increasing the breakdown voltage. This action is described with reference to
A characteristic feature of the present invention is to provide the first opening 6 through which an insulating liquid flows into the first container 5. In this embodiment, the first opening 6 is used also as a region for leading out the first lead-out line pair 4. Thus, the first opening 6 is required to have a gap for allowing an insulating liquid to flow therethrough under a state in which the first lead-out line pair 4 is extracted. In the present invention, the opening is positively provided in the first container 5, and hence an insulating liquid is successfully filled without gas bubbles trapped in the first container 5 in a process of assembling the X-ray generating apparatus. Further, in the present invention, it is desired that a region in the first container 5 other than the core 2 and the primary coil 3 be the clearance, and the first container 5 have an inner-side separated portion separated from at least one of the core 2 or the primary coil 3. It is desired that the inner-side separated portion be an annular portion along an inner wall of the first container 5. Such an inner-side separated portion serves as a path for allowing an insulating liquid to flow therethrough, with the result that the insulating liquid can be filled without gas bubbles trapped in the first container 5.
In the present invention, it is preferred that the primary coil 3 and the secondary coil 7 be symmetrically located around the central axis of the core 2. In addition, it is preferred that the first opening 6 be located in the first container 5 on an outer peripheral side thereof in terms of a breakdown voltage. When the first opening 6 is located at the outer periphery of the first container 5 as described above, as indicated by the dashed double-headed arrow 9 in
In addition, in the present invention, the first container 5 and the secondary coil 7 may be housed in a second container 18 as illustrated in
In this embodiment, similarly to the first container 5, the second container 18 is formed of two members 18a and 18b that are fitted to each other in the axial direction, and the members 18a and 18b overlie each other over the entire circumference in the radial direction except for the second opening 19 and the third opening 20. Further, the second opening 19 and the third opening 20 are axisymmetrically formed in the outer periphery of the second container.
Also in the second container 18, it is desired that a region other than the container 5 and the secondary coil 7 be the clearance, and the second container 18 have an outer-side separated portion separated from at least one of the first container 5 or the secondary coil 7. It is desired that the outer-side separated portion be an annular portion along an inner wall of the second container 18. Such an outer-side separated portion serves as a path for allowing an insulating liquid to flow therethrough, with the result that the insulating liquid can be filled without gas bubbles trapped in the second container 18.
The second container 18 exists, as a discharge barrier, between the primary coil 3 and the secondary coil 7 and between the secondary coil 7 and other members of the X-ray generating apparatus, and contributes for increasing an internal breakdown voltage of the X-ray generating apparatus. Similarly to the first container 5, the second container 18 is formed of the two members 18a and 18b fitted to each other and has an annular hollow part. The inner periphery of the second container 18 and the inner periphery of the first container 5 are overlie each other. It is preferred that the second container 18 and the first container 5 be located concentrically.
Further, in the present invention, the first lead-out line pair 4 and the second lead-out line pair 8 are symmetrically located around the central axis of the core 2, and hence the shortest path between the first lead-out line pair 4 and the second lead-out line pair 8 is lengthened on the outer side of the first container 5 into which an insulating liquid is filled, which is preferred.
[X-ray Generating Apparatus]
Inside of the X-ray generating tube 32, which is kept in a vacuum state, an electron gun is provided on a cathode side and a target is provided on an anode side. Electrons emitted from the electron gun are accelerated by a voltage of about from several dozen kilovolts to several hundred kilovolts applied between the electrodes and collide with the target, with the result that X-rays are emitted to the outside.
The drive device 33 is used to define potentials of, for example, a filament, a grid electrode, and a lens electrode (all not shown), which are required for driving the electron gun. In the drive device 33, the isolation transformer 36 multiplies, by an AC signal of about 10 V or a pulse train signal from the drive control portion 35, a cathode potential of the X-ray generating tube 32 generated by the high-voltage generating circuit 40 described later, and the drive circuit 37 generates and outputs a potential defining signal. The isolation transformer 36 includes a primary coil 36a electrically connected to an AC power source in the drive control portion 35, and a secondary coil 36b electrically connected to the drive circuit 37 having the cathode potential as a reference. The isolation transformer 36 transforms a voltage of a signal (AC voltage) from the drive control portion 35 into hundreds of volts at the maximum with a suitable turns ratio, and outputs the resultant to the drive circuit 37. The isolation transformer 36 is required to have a dielectric strength between the primary coil 36a close to the ground potential and the secondary coil 36b having the cathode potential, the secondary coil 36b being connected on a low potential side of the high-voltage generating circuit 40. Thus, the isolation transformer 36 is a high-voltage isolation transformer in which the primary coil 36a and the secondary coil 36b are isolated from each other by the permeation of the insulating liquid 41. Further, a plurality of the isolation transformers 36 may be used, and in this case, the isolation transformers 36 may be selectively used depending on outputs to be generated. The drive circuit 37 is a circuit including a full-wave rectifier circuit, a half-wave rectifier circuit, a Cockcroft-Walton circuit, and the like, and can be appropriately used depending on each of potentials of the potential defined portions. For example, the cathode potential is multiplied by signals so that the lens electrode is applied with a DC voltage of about 1 kV, the grid electrode is applied with a pulsed voltage of about 100 V, and the filament is applied with a DC voltage of about 10 V.
In the tube voltage generating device 34, an AC signal having a voltage of about from dozens of volts to hundreds of volts is input from the tube voltage control portion 38 to the primary coil 39a of the high-voltage transformer 39, and the signal is boosted by the secondary coil 39b having a turns ratio of about from 20 to 500. Then, the high-voltage generating circuit 40 generates a DC voltage of about from twice to 12 times as large as the original voltage. The high-voltage transformer 39 is a high-voltage isolation transformer in which the primary coil 39a and the secondary coil 39b having a high voltage are isolated from each other by the permeation of the insulating liquid 41. The high-voltage generating circuit 40 is a voltage doubler rectifier circuit as represented by a Cockcroft-Walton circuit. In general, the anode of the X-ray generating tube 32 is grounded and the cathode thereof is applied with a negative tube voltage. Alternatively, a tube voltage is divided into a positive voltage and a negative voltage to be applied to the anode and the cathode, respectively. As a result, a potential of the cathode during driving is always a negative high voltage.
The insulating liquid 41 ensures a dielectric strength in the container 42. As the insulating liquid 41, an electrical insulating oil such as a mineral oil, a silicone oil, or a fluorine-based oil is preferred. For an X-ray generating apparatus having a tube voltage of about 100 kV, a mineral oil that is easily handled is preferably applied.
The container 42 is made of a metal such as iron, stainless steel, lead, brass, or copper. In order to handle the X-ray generating apparatus 31 safely, it is preferred that a potential of the container 42 be defined to the ground potential.
A method of filling the insulating liquid 41 involves: housing all of necessary members in the container 42; thereafter placing the container 42 in a vacuum chamber for vacuuming, in a state in which an insulating liquid inlet of the container is opened; filling an insulating liquid into the container 42 through the inlet in a vacuum atmosphere; and then, releasing the vacuum atmosphere and sealing the inlet.
[Radiography System]
The radiography system 51 of the present invention includes the X-ray generating apparatus 31 employing a small and high-voltage isolation transformer, and hence a smaller system that is stable in breakdown voltage is provided.
An isolation transformer having the structure illustrated in
The first container 5 was formed of a PEEK resin through cutting work. The first container 5 has an axisymmetric doughnut-shape. The members 5a and 5b forming the first container 5 were formed so that the members each had a thickness of 1 mm at a fitting portion and a thickness of 2 mm at portions other than the fitting portion, an annular hollow part formed of the first container 5 surrounded a cross-section of 5 mm×15 mm of the core 2, and a cross-section of the hollow part was 6 mm×16 mm. Further, as illustrated in
The primary coil 3 was wound around the core 2 20 times, and both ends of the primary coil 3 were connected to the first lead-out line pair 4. The core 2 around which the primary coil 3 was wound was housed in the first container 5, and the first lead-out line pair 4 was extracted from the first opening 6. The inner-side separated portion 9 was formed between the core 2 around which the primary coil 3 was wound and the annular hollow part of the first container 5. In the first opening 6, the core 2 is retracted from the first container 5, and an end portion of the core 2 is retracted from an end portion of the member 5a by 2 mm and from an end portion of the member 5b by 1 mm. The first opening 6 was formed so that the center thereof in the circumferential direction was positioned at the center of the region in which the primary coil 3 was wound.
Then, the secondary coil 7 was wound around the core 2 200 times in an overlaid manner so as to have a width of about 5 mm, on a side opposed to the first opening 6 across the central axis of the first container 5, and both ends of the secondary coil 7 were connected to the second lead-out line pair 8, to thereby obtain an isolation transformer according to Example 1 of the present invention.
The above-mentioned isolation transformer was housed in a container, and the container was placed in a vacuum chamber under a state in which an insulating liquid inlet of the container was opened. Then, an insulating liquid was filled into the container under a vacuum state, and a breakdown voltage was evaluated by soaking the isolation transformer in the insulating liquid. A high-voltage insulating oil A (trade name; manufactured by JX Nippon Oil & Energy Corporation) was used as the insulating liquid. The first lead-out line pair 4 was grounded and the second lead-out line pair 8 was connected to an output of a commercially available high-voltage power source. Then, a high voltage was applied between the primary coil 3 and the secondary coil 7. The voltage was increased by 1 kV per second and discharge voltages were examined. As Comparative Example 1, an isolation transformer without the first opening 6 was also measured. The phrase “without the first opening 6” means that there is only a hole through which the first lead-out line pair 4 barely passes, and the remaining configuration of Comparative Example 1 is the same as that of Example 1. The average of the discharge voltages was about 80 kV in Comparative Example 1 and about 110 kV in Example 1. From the foregoing, it was confirmed that the isolation transformer of the present invention was increased in breakdown voltage for use in the insulating liquid.
An isolation transformer was manufactured similarly to Example 1 with the exception that, as illustrated in
The above-mentioned isolation transformer was used, and a breakdown voltage was evaluated in the insulating liquid similarly to Example 1. As a result, the average of discharge voltages of this example 1 was about 125 kV. This is because discharge between the primary coil 3 and the secondary coil 7 less occurred outside of the isolation transformer, and hence the discharge voltages were increased from Example 1. From the foregoing, an effect of the partition structure 15 was confirmed, and it was confirmed that the isolation transformer was more increased in breakdown voltage.
An isolation transformer was manufactured similarly to Example 1 except for using the second container 18 illustrated in
A breakdown voltage of the above-mentioned isolation transformer was evaluated in the insulating liquid similarly to Example 1. As a result, the average of discharge voltages of this example 1 was about 125 kV, which was the same value as that in Example 2, and the breakdown voltage was increased from Example 1. From the foregoing, an effect of the second container 18 was confirmed, and it was confirmed that the isolation transformer was more increased in breakdown voltage.
The X-ray generating apparatus 31 of
In the X-ray generating apparatus 31 of this example, the X-ray generating tube 32 had the anode having a ground potential and the cathode to which a voltage of −100 kV was applied upon the driving. Signals each based on a cathode potential were appropriately applied to the filament electrode, the grid electrode, and the lens electrode. The filament electrode was applied with a DC voltage of 10 V, the grid electrode was applied with a cut-off voltage of −10 V for the non-driving state and a pulse voltage of 100 V for the driving state, and the lens electrode was applied with a DC voltage of 1 kV.
A drive durability test was performed with the above-mentioned driving conditions. No discharge occurred even with 20,000 times driving and stable driving was observed. As described above, with the use of the isolation transformer that had been increased in breakdown voltage, an X-ray generating apparatus having high driving reliability was able to be achieved.
According to the present invention, the insulating liquid is successfully filled into the container of the isolation transformer, and hence an amount of gas bubbles remaining in the container is reduced. Consequently, the isolation transformer is small in size and has an increased breakdown voltage, and the X-ray generating apparatus and the radiography system having high reliability are provided with the use of the isolation transformer.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2015-001371, filed Jan. 7, 2015, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2015-001371 | Jan 2015 | JP | national |
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Number | Date | Country |
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11-74135 | Mar 1999 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160196915 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |