The present patent application is a non-provisional application of International Application No. PCT/IB02/001965, filed May 30, 2002.
The invention relates to an X-ray optical element, a collimator for high-energy electromagnetic radiation, an alternative X-ray optical element, alternative collimator, an X-ray detector as well as a spectrometer.
Notably the detection of X-rays, but also of other high-energy electromagnetic radiation, gives rise to the problem that an examination result concerning information contained in such radiation, for example, spectrometric information or images of regions of different absorption, is falsified by background radiation. It is inevitable, notably in the X-ray range in which X-ray optical elements operate essentially in reflection only and not in transmission, that reflected radiation as produced by the incidence of photos on the reflecting material as well as secondary radiation, such as characteristic radiation of the material used in the relevant optical system, are also detected and hence falsify the result.
In order to reduce scattered radiation, for example, use is made of diaphragms, that is, components which leave only a small opening for the passage of radiation. However, secondary radiation or reflected radiation can also pass through this opening. Such disturbing radiation is reduced when a succession of diaphragms is arranged along the optical path at a distance from one another. However, it is to be noted that secondary radiation is also produced at the area of the opening for the radiation; this is due to the interaction of the radiation with the edge zone of the passage opening, for example, of the diaphragm aperture. This again yields radiation which falsifies a measuring result and is mixed with the measuring signal. The more diaphragms or the like are arranged in succession, the larger the surface area of interaction will be. Therefore, the occurrence of disturbing radiation cannot be effectively counteracted by simply increasing the number of diaphragms.
It is an object of the invention to remove disturbing radiation of the described kind as much as possible from a measuring beam.
This object is achieved in accordance with the invention by means of an X-ray optical diaphragm as disclosed herein, a collimator and an X-ray optical element as well as by means of a collimators, an X-ray detector and a spectrometer. Advantageous embodiments are also disclosed.
Because of the angulation of the edge zone, radiation incident thereon is reflected at an angle which is more inclined, relative to the direction of propagation of the rays, notably X-rays, than in the absence of the angulation. Both the reflected radiation and the secondary radiation are thus removed from the radiation containing the actual information. The disturbance component is thus reduced. However, the construction of the diaphragm overall may still be very thin, thus enabling only slight interaction with the diaphragm material.
The angulation advantageously is such that the passage opening becomes narrower in the beam direction. The rays interacting with the edge zone of the passage opening, therefore, are incident on a surface which is inclined towards the rays in the case of a parallel beam path and hence are very thoroughly deflected away from the propagation direction followed thus far upon incidence on this surface. The risk that deflected rays or secondary rays are also detected, therefore, is small.
It is particularly advantageous, and of a special importance for trace analysis, to arrange several of such diaphragms one behind the other and at a distance from one another, the angulation being particularly advantageous if, in the case of grazing incidence of a light beam along the angulated surface, a first diaphragm does not conduct this light beam to the next diaphragm which is transparent thereto, but against walls of a tube which is arranged between these diaphragms so that beams which are incident on the edge surface at an angle of incidence larger than 0 instead of at a grazing angle are indeed reflected against said walls and not against the next diaphragm. This is important notably for characteristic and hence material-specific X-rays, because the diaphragms are often made of the same material, so that the second diaphragm would be transparent as if it were for such characteristic radiation. A material mix between the diaphragms or similar X-ray optical components would also be of assistance. Such an arrangement with suitably chosen distances between the diaphragms offers a significant improvement of the suppression of the background. The measuring accuracy can thus be significantly increased.
X-ray optical elements of this kind can be used in various devices, notably in collimators in X-ray spectrometers and X-ray detectors for the examination of information originating from an X-ray beam. Trace analysis represents one possible field of application.
An alternative embodiment of an X-ray optical element is provided with a graduation different zones are formed in the direction of propagation of the beam, so that rays which are incident on a wall surface in the elongate zone and are reflected or scattered thereby or cause secondary radiation are kept away from the beam path by reflection or absorption by the step in the subsequent, constricted zone. A collimator may also be provided with such an element; a combination of the abovementioned elements and the graduated elements is also feasible. In any case, an adequate distance should again be maintained between the element at the entrance side and the element at the exit side in the collimator. Elements may also be ranged therebetween.
Further advantages and details of the invention will become apparent from the embodiments of the invention which are described with reference to the drawing. In the drawing:
The collimator 1 shown in
The collimator 1 serves as an imaging element which operates purely in the transmission mode for high-energy electromagnetic rays, for example, for X-rays. To this end, the collimator 1 includes an entrance diaphragm 3 and an exit diaphragm 4 as well as a tube 5 which is situated therebetween and on the inner walls 6 of which reflection, scattering or other formation of secondary radiation of the electromagnetic rays propagating along the optical path 8 can take place.
The diaphragms 3, 4 are provided with respective passage openings 3a, 4a which are constructed, for example, as a slit or as a passage opening bounded by a round contour. The edge zones 3b, 4b are angulated relative to the direction of propagation of the rays which in this case coincides with the optical axis 8.
The X-ray optical elements 3, 4 may be provided with different angulations in their edge zones 9, 10 as shown in
Moreover, the angle β of the edge zones 10 around the passage opening 4a of the X-ray optical element 4 at the exit side is such that a grazing ray 7b thereon just has to originate from the inner walls 6. The distance L between the entrance diaphragm 3 and the exit diaphragm 4 is chosen accordingly.
In the present construction in the form of hole diaphragms 3, 4, the edge zones 9, 10 are angulated each time on the full circle surrounding the passage zone 3a, 4a. However, depending on the shape of the passage opening 3a, 4a for example, in the case of a slit-shaped diaphragm, this is not absolutely necessary. It is not absolutely necessary either that the passage openings 3a, 4a are constructed in the direction of propagation 7 of the rays as is shown in
As opposed to the arrangement shown in
The X-ray optical elements 3, 4 together lead to a stronger enlargement of the emission angle γ of scattered radiation and fluorescent radiation, emanating as secondary rays in the case of interaction between hip-energy electromagnetic waves and matter, from the beam path 7 relative to the propagation direction 7 of the rays to be measured on the detector 2. Consequently, fewer of such disturbing rays appear on the detector window 2.
The
When a diverging ray 113 is incident on the edge zone 109 and is reflected or scattered therefrom or generate secondary rays so that a ray 113b is obtained which emanates from the edge surface 109 at the angle ε, this ray 113b is incident on the constricted zone of the diaphragm 103 or 104. At that area it can either be scattered back or reflected, so that it is removed from the beam path 7. Absorption in the material at the area of the shorter edge zone 110 is also possible. The absorption is particularly effective when the second plate 112 is made of a material other than that of the first plate member 111, because characteristic radiation of the material as produced in the edge zone 109 can then also be absorbed in the plate member 112.
A construction of the diaphragm 104 as a single piece, as shown in
X-ray optical elements 3, 4, 103, 104 of this kind are generally known for use in spectrometers for example for trace analysis, or in X-ray detectors, for example, for the acquisition of information concerning different absorption behaviors of X-rays in a spatially resolved manner. A special application is found in X-ray detectors or spectrometers or spectrometers utilizing similar high-energy radiation.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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01202113 | Jun 2001 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB02/01965 | 5/30/2002 | WO | 00 | 7/13/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/097826 | 12/5/2002 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2558492 | Van Rijssel et al. | Jun 1951 | A |
4809314 | Steele et al. | Feb 1989 | A |
5682415 | O'Hara | Oct 1997 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040240620 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |