1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing an image recording medium capable of recording image information as an electrostatic latent image.
2. Description of the Related Art
In the medical radiation imaging, image recording media that include a radiation sensitive photoconductor are used abundantly for reducing the radiation dosage received by the subject and improving diagnostic performance. When radiation is irradiated on the image recording medium that includes the photoconductor, electric charges (latent image charges) are stored in the medium according to the dose of the radiation. Thereafter, the radiation image information may be read out from the image recording medium by detecting the charges stored in the medium.
An image recording medium constituted by a layer composite is known as such image recording medium. The layer composite includes: a recording side electrode layer transparent to recording radiation; a recording photoconductive layer that shows photoconductivity when exposed to the recording radiation; a readout photoconductive layer that shows photoconductivity when exposed to a readout electromagnetic wave; a readout side electrode layer transparent to the readout electromagnetic wave. In such image recording medium, it is conceivable that a photoconductive material consisting primarily of a-Se is used, for example, for either of the readout photoconductive layer or recording photoconductive layer, and a photoconductive material consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi12MO20 (M is one of Ge, Si or Ti) is used for the other.
A method for manufacturing an image recording medium by bonding an active matrix substrate having an electric charge storing capacitor and a TFT (thin film transistor) to an opposing substrate having photoconductivity (compound semiconductor such as CdTe, CdZnTe or the like) using an anisotropic conductive adhesive is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,262,408 as a method for manufacturing an image recording medium by bonding different kinds of materials together.
Thus, in manufacturing an image recording medium that includes a photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se, and a photoconductive layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi12MO20, it is conceivable that the image recording medium may be manufactured by bonding a single readout photoconductive layer or a layer composite including the readout photoconductive layer to a single recording photoconductive layer or a layer composite including the recording photoconductive layer using an anisotropic conductive adhesive.
The use of anisotropic conductive adhesive for bonding, however, requires heating, pressurizing, or the like in order to force the diameter of the conductive particles included in the adhesive to conform to the application thickness of the adhesive when performing the bonding. But a-Se is prone to degradation or destruction by heat or high pressure, and is degraded or destroyed by the heat or pressure applied thereto when the bonding is performed. Thus, the method using the anisotropic conductive adhesive is not suited for manufacturing an image recording medium having a photoconductive layer that includes a-Se.
The present invention has been developed in view of the circumstances described above, and it is an object of the present invention to provide a method for manufacturing an image recording medium that includes a photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se, in which the a-Se may be prevented from degradation or destruction.
The method for manufacturing an image recording medium of the present invention is a method for manufacturing an image recording medium constituted by a layer composite layered in the order of:
a recording side electrode layer transparent to recording radiation;
a recording photoconductive layer that shows photoconductivity when exposed to the recording radiation)
a charge storage section for storing charges of latent image polarity generated in the recording photoconductive layer;
a readout photoconductive layer that shows photoconductivity when exposed to a readout electromagnetic wave; and
a readout side electrode layer transparent to the readout electromagnetic wave, wherein:
either of the recording photoconductive layer or readout photoconductive layer consists primarily of a-Se, and the other consists primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound; and
the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se is formed by deposition after the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound is formed.
The referent of “consists primarily of a-Se” as used herein means that a-Se is included more than or equal to 90% as the major component of the photoconductive layer. Likewise, the referent of “consists primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound” as used herein means that sintered compacts of Bi-system compound is included more than or equal to 90% as the major component of the photoconductive layer.
Further, the referent of “the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se is formed by deposition after the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound is formed” as used herein means that the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se is formed by depositing the layer on a single layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound or on a layer composite that includes the layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound.
The recording photoconductive layer may consist primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound, and the readout photoconductive layer may consist primarily of a-Se. Further, the sintered compacts of Bi-system may be sintered compacts of Bi12MO20 (M is one of Ge, Si or Ti). Still further, the readout photoconductive layer and readout side electrode layer may be bonded together by an adhesive. Preferably, the adhesive is a light curable adhesive.
According to the method for manufacturing an image recording medium of the present invention, the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se is formed by deposition after the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound is formed. This method does not require bonding of the substrate that includes the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of a-Se and the substrate that includes the photoconductive layer consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi-system compound together using an anisotropic conductive adhesive. Accordingly, no heating or pressurizing is required in the process of manufacturing an image recording medium and thereby a-Se used is prevented from degradation or destruction. That is, the yield rate of the image recording medium may be improved.
(1) Construction of Image Recording Medium and Method for Manufacturing the Medium
The construction of the image recording medium of the present invention will be described first with reference to
The recording side electrode layer 11 may be made of any material as long as it is transparent to radiation. For example, a transparent glass plate with conductive material applied uniformly thereon (Nesa film or the like), or the like may be used as the recording side electrode layer 11.
A photoconductive material consisting primarily of a-Se is used for either of the recording photoconductive layer 12 or the readout photoconductive layer 14, and a photoconductive material consisting primarily of Bintered compacts of Bi-system compound is used for the other. The present embodiment will be described on the assumption that the recording photoconductive layer 12 consists primarily of sintered compacts of Bi12MO20, and the readout photoconductive layer 14 consists primarily of a-Se. Further, instead of the sintered compacts of Bi12MO20 described above, sintered compacts of Bi12M5O12, a sintered film of polycrystalline substance made of Bi12MO20 (M is at least one of Ge, Si or Ti) having a filling rate of not less than 70% with layer thickness from 50 μm to 600 μm as described in European patent Publication No. 1376245, sintered compacts of Bi2O3 as described in Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-109849, sintered compacts of Bi2Ti7O7 as described in Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-109850, or sintered compacts of BiMO4 (M is at least one of V, Nb or Ta) as described in Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-279708 may be used for the photoconductive layer.
As for the material of the charge transport layer 13, materials having a greater difference in charge mobility between the negative charges charged on the recording side electrode layer 11 and the opposite positive charges are preferable. These materials include organic compounds such as poly N-vinylcarbazole (FVK), N,N′-diphenyl-N,N′-bis(3-methylphenyl)-[1,1′-biphenyl]-4,4′-dia mine (TPD), discotic liquid crystal, and the like, or semiconductor materials such as TPD-dispersed polymers (polycarbonate, polystyrene, PUK), a-Se doped with 10 to 200 ppm of Cl, and the like. In particular, the organic compounds (PVK, TPD, discotic liquid crystal, and the like) are preferable, since these materials are insensitive to light. Moreover, these materials have generally a small dielectric constant, resulting in small capacitance of the capacitor formed between the charge transport layer 13 and readout photoconductive layer 14, and thereby signal extraction efficiency may be improved when the signal charges are read out. Further, the charge transport 13 may be a selenium arsenic alloy doped with halogen. Here, the amount of the halogen is preferable to be in the range from 10 to 200 ppm in weight. Preferably, the amount of halogen is not greater than 20 ppm in weight if the arsenic is not doped. Incidentally, the image recording medium 10 does not necessarily include the charge transport layer 13.
The readout side electrode layer 15 may be a transparent glass plate with a conductive material applied uniformly thereon (Nesa film or the like) like the recording side electrode layer 11. But it may be constituted by a comb electrode like that used in the image recording medium as described, for example, in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 20040227114.
Hereinafter, a method for manufacturing the image recording medium 10 will be specifically described with reference to
Then, the readout side electrode layer 15 is bonded to the layer composite 22 that includes the readout photoconductive layer 14 by the adhesive 23 (
As described above, the readout photoconductive layer 14 consisting primarily of a-Se is formed by deposition after the recording photoconductive layer 12 consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi12O20 is formed. Thus, bonding of the readout photoconductive layer 14 consisting primarily of a-Se to the layer composite 21 that includes the reading photoconductive layer 12 consisting primarily of sintered compacts of Bi12MO20 by an anisotropic conductive adhesive is not required. Accordingly, no heating or pressurizing is required in the process of manufacturing the image recording medium 10 and thereby a-Se used is prevented from degradation or destruction. That is, the yield rate of the image recording medium 10 may be improved.
(2) Recording/Readout System Having the Image Recording Medium
Hereinafter, the method for recording an electrostatic latent image on the image recording medium, and the method for reading out the electrostatic latent image from the medium will be described. The referent of “electrostatic latent image” as used herein means a subject image represented by the charges stored in the image recording medium.
The recording side electrode 11 of the image recording medium 10 is connected to the negative pole of the power source 10 through switch S1 and one end of the switch S2. The terminal 60 of the switch S2 is connected to the current detecting section 70. The terminal 62 of the switch S2 is connected to the readout side electrode layer 15 of the image recording medium 10, positive pole of the power supply 50, and ground. The current detecting section 70 includes a detecting amplifier 70a, which is an operational amplifier, and a feedback resister 70b, thereby forming a so-called a current/voltage conversion circuit.
A subject 9 is positioned above the recording side electrode layer 11. The subject 9 includes a section 9a which is transparent to recording radiation L1 and a blocking section (light shielding section) 9b which is opaque to the recording radiation L1. The radiation irradiating section 90 is provided for irradiating the recording radiation L1 uniformly on the subject 9, The readout exposure section 92 is provided for scan exposing with readout light L2, such as an infrared laser beam, LED, or EL, in the direction indicated by the arrow in
Then, the recording radiation L1 is irradiated uniformly onto the subject 9 from the radiation irradiating section 90. Some of the recording radiation L1 transmits through the transparent section 9a of the subject 9 and further transmits through the recording side electrode layer 11, The recording photoconductive layer 12 shows conductivity when exposed to the recording radiation L1 transmitted through the recording side electrode layer 11. This process is like the operation of a variable resistor that varies its resistance value according to the radiation dose of the recording radiation L1. The resistance value depends on the amount of positive/negative charge pairs generated by the recording radiation L1, and if the radiation dose of the recording radiation L1 transmitted through the subject 9 is small, the variable resistor shows a high resistance value. The negative and positive charges generated by the recording radiation L1 are indicated by encircled minus (−) signs and encircled plus (+) signs respectively in the drawings.
The positive charges generated in the recording photoconductive layer 12 move rapidly through the recording photoconductive layer 12 toward the recording side electrode layer 11, and disappear through charge recombination with the negative charges charged at the interface between the recording side electrode layer 11 and recording photoconductive layer 12 (
Here, the description has been made that the charge storage section 31 is formed at the interface between the recording photoconductive layer 12 and charge transport layer 13. If the charge transport layer 13 is not included in the image recording medium 10, the charge storage section 31 is formed at the interface between the recording photoconductive layer 12 and readout photoconductive layer 14.
In the mean time, the recording radiation L1 does not transmit through the light shielding section 9b of the subject 9, so that the portion of the image recording medium 10 that lies under the light shielding section 9b of the subject 9 shows no changes (
Hereinafter, the electrostatic latent image readout process will be described with reference to
When the readout side electrode layer 15 is scan exposed with the readout light L2 by the readout exposure section 92, the readout light L2 transmits through the readout side electrode layer 15, and the readout photoconductive layer 14 irradiated by the readout light L2 transmitted through the readout side electrode layer 15 shows conductivity. This is due to the fact that the positive/negative charge pairs are generated in the readout photoconductive layer 14 when exposed to the readout light L2, like the positive/negative charge pairs are generated in the recording photoconductive layer 12 when exposed to the recording radiation L1 (
A very strong electric field (intense electric field) is formed between the charge storage section 31 storing the charges of latent image polarity and readout electrode layer 15 depending on the total film thickness of the readout photoconductive layer 14 and charge transport layer 13, and the amount of the charges of latent image polarity. Here, since the charge transport layer 13 acts as a conductor for positive charges, the positive charges generated in the readout photoconductive layer 14 move rapidly through the charge transport layer 13 attracted by the negative charges stored in the charge storage section 31 and disappear through charge recombination with the negative charges at the charge storage section 31. In the mean time, negative charges generated in the readout photoconductive layer 14 are recombined with the positive charges of the readout side electrode layer 15 and disappear (
By scan exposing each of the sections corresponding to each of the pixels on the image recording medium 10 by the readout light L2 in the manner as described above, the amount of charges of each of the sections corresponding to each of the pixels may be read out. That is, by scan exposing the entire region of the readout side electrode layer 15, the electrostatic latent image recorded in the image recording medium 10 may be read out.
The image recording medium 10 according to the present embodiment includes the recording photoconductive layer 12 and charge transport layer 13 with the charge storage section 31 being formed at the interface between the recording photoconductive layer 12 and charge transport layer 13. But the charge transport layer 13 may be replaced by a trap layer, in which case the latent image charges are captured by the trap layer, and stored in the trap layer or at the interface between the trap layer and recording photoconductive layer 12.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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081066/2005 | Mar 2005 | JP | national |