This application is a national phase of International Application No. PCT/US07/67112 filed Apr. 20, 2007 and published in the English language.
The present invention relates generally to x-ray tubes and, more particularly to an x-ray method and x-ray tube employing a transmission anode.
Typically, a high power x-ray tube includes an evacuated envelope made of metal, ceramic or glass, which holds a cathode filament through which a heating current is passed. This current heats the filament sufficiently that a cloud of electrons is emitted, i.e., thermionic emission occurs. A high potential, typically on the order of 10-300 kilovolts, is applied between the cathode and an anode assembly, which also is located within the evacuated envelope. This potential causes electrons to flow from the cathode to the anode assembly through the evacuated region within the interior of the evacuated envelope. The electron beam strikes the anode with sufficient energy that x-rays are generated.
The geometric configuration of the cathode 12, anode 14 and collimator 24 for the x-ray tube 10 may be described by both the anode inclination (AI) angle and the x-ray emission (XE) angle, as shown in
The shape of the collimator aperture determines the shape of the x-ray beam. For example, a circular aperture provides a cone-shaped beam with its vertex at the focal spot and with the vertex half-angle equal to arc tan (r/d), where r is the radius of the collimator aperture and d is the distance of the plane of the collimator aperture from the focal spot.
In
With the above features, many present day x-ray tubes have one or more of the following limitations: for cone shaped x-ray beams, the x-ray intensity distribution is asymmetric with respect to the beam axis; for cone shaped x-ray beams, the projected size of the focal spot becomes larger when observed at different points in the beam area (see focal spot 32 versus focal spot 34 in
The present invention provides an x-ray tube having a transmission anode. The transmission anode includes an x-ray generation layer disposed on an anode substrate. The anode assembly is configured to receive electron energy at the x-ray generation layer and to emit x-rays through the anode substrate. The provision of a transmission anode facilitates, among other things, improved x-ray yield and power, reduced focal spot blooming and wider vertex angles for cone-beam applications.
One aspect of the invention relates to an x-ray tube having an x-ray tube envelope, a cathode assembly disposed within the x-ray tube envelope, and a transmission anode assembly disposed within the x-ray tube envelope.
In accordance with another aspect, the transmission anode assembly comprises an x-ray generation layer disposed on an anode substrate.
In accordance with another aspect, the anode assembly is configured to receive electron energy at the x-ray generation layer and to emit x-rays through the anode substrate.
Another aspect of the invention relates to an anode assembly for use in an x-ray tube. The anode assembly includes an x-ray generation layer disposed on an anode substrate, wherein the anode assembly is configured to have an anode inclination angle and an x-ray emission angle that are both about zero degrees.
Another aspect of the invention relates to a method of producing an x-ray beam that includes accelerating electrons from a cathode toward an anode to produce x-rays, and using the x-rays that pass through the anode to form the x-ray beam.
The foregoing and other features of the invention are hereinafter fully described and particularly pointed out in the claims, the following description and annexed drawings setting forth in detail a certain illustrative embodiment of the invention, this embodiment, being indicative, however, of but one of the various ways in which the principles of the invention may be employed.
The forgoing and other features of the invention are hereinafter discussed with reference to the drawings.
In the detailed description that follows, like components have been given the same reference numerals regardless of whether they are shown in different embodiments of the present invention. To illustrate the present invention in a clear and concise manner, the drawings may not necessarily be to scale and certain features may be shown in somewhat schematic form.
The present disclosure provides a transmission anode x-ray tube, where the transmission anode has an x-ray generation layer disposed on an anode substrate. The transmission anode is configured to receive electron energy at the x-ray generation layer and to emit x-rays through the anode substrate.
Referring now to
As is describe more fully below, the transmission anode 46, including the x-ray generation layer 48 and the anode substrate 50, is configured to receive accelerating electrons 52 from the cathode 44 and producing or otherwise generating x-rays 54, e.g., due to the interaction between the accelerating electrons and the material of the x-ray generation layer, where the generated x-rays pass through the anode substrate 50 (and optionally a collimator 56) an x-ray beam. Stated differently, the beam of accelerating electrons 52 has normal or near-normal incidence on the x-ray generating layer 48, and the x-rays emitted in the forward direction from the focal spot pass through the x-ray generating layer and through the substrate (and optionally through a collimator) to form the emergent x-ray beam. It will be appreciated that the anode assembly 46 is referred to as a transmission anode because x-rays essentially pass or otherwise are transmitted through the anode (as opposed to a conventional reflection anode where generated x-rays essentially reflect off the anode).
The geometric configuration of the cathode 44 and anode 46 (as well as any associated collimator 56) for the x-ray tube may be described by both the anode inclination (AI) angle and the x-ray emission (XE) angle, where the AI angle is defined as the angle between the axis of the incident electron beam and the normal to the anode surface, e.g., the normal to the surface of the x-ray generation layer. The XE angle is defined as the angle between the axes of the incident electron beam and the emergent x-ray beam.
While conventional x-ray tubes typically exhibit an AI angle in the range of about 6 degrees to about 30 degrees and an XE angle of about 90 degrees, the x-ray tube illustrated in
As noted above, the anode may have a composite structure with an x-ray generation layer made from materials including, but not limited to tungsten or molybdenum, on a substrate material. The substrate may be made from any suitable low-density material, including, but not limited to silicon carbide, beryllium oxide, aluminum nitride or aluminum oxide. In one preferred embodiment, the anode includes a relatively thin x-ray generating layer of tungsten, e.g., about 5 microns to about 25 microns, disposed on a thicker substrate layer of silicon carbide, e.g., about 1 millimeter to about 5 millimeters. In another embodiment, the thickness of the x-ray generation layer is about 5 microns. In another embodiment, the thickness of the x-ray generation layer is about 10 microns. In another embodiment, the thickness of the x-ray generation layer is about 15 microns.
In a preferred embodiment, where the x-ray generation layer is comprised of tungsten, the thickness of the x-ray generation layer is chosen to provide the maximum x-ray output through the anode as a consequence of the competing effects of x-ray production and attenuation in the anode material, is equal to approximately one third of the electron range for a given incident electron energy (or tube kilovoltage). Values for the thickness of the x-ray generation layer as a function of the tube kilovoltage are shown in
The x-ray generation layer may be deposited on a substrate material for mechanical stability, since preferred thicknesses as shown in
In one embodiment, the substrate may be selected to be about 3 millimeters silicon carbide (which approximately matches the 3 millimeters aluminum used as the external filter in the definition of the x-ray yield). It is that the 3 millimeters aluminum filter specified for the measurement of the exposure rate is a baseline filter that is introduced to permit quantitative comparisons of the x-ray yield based on the same attenuated x-ray spectrum for both the reflection and transmission anode tubes (see
The transmission anode may be stationary or may rotate about a central axis 58 (also referred to as an anode axis or anode shaft). Also, the transmission anode may take on multiple geometries without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Referring now to
The rotating cylindrical transmission anode provides a means for increasing the focal track width without changing the size of the focal spot or the position and direction of the electron beam emerging from the cathode. This may be accomplished by oscillating the rotating cylinder in the direction of its rotation axis (along the direction of arrow 60). With these two superimposed motions of rotation and oscillation, a spiral focal track may be produced which may encompass much, if not all, of the inner surface of the x-ray generation layer. The width of the focal track on the x-ray generation layer is thus effectively increased from the width of the focal spot for a single focal track to a width equal to the total amplitude of the oscillation. This increased width of the focal track may effectively extend beyond a distance of twice the oscillation amplitude, depending on the heat conductivity and total length of the cylinder. The corresponding increase in the area of the circumferential focal track now increases the rate of heat loss by radiation, which depends on both the fourth power of the focal track temperature, and on the area of both the inner and outer radiating surfaces of the cylinder (or twice the focal track width).
With continued reference to
As discussed above with respect to
In a preferred embodiment, where the x-ray generation layer is comprised of tungsten, the thickness of the x-ray generation layer is chosen to provide the maximum x-ray output through the anode as a consequence of the competing effects of x-ray production and attenuation in the anode material, is equal to approximately one third of the electron range for a given incident electron energy (or tube kilovoltage). Values for the thickness of the x-ray generation layer as a function of the tube kilovoltage are shown in
The x-ray generation layer may be deposited on a substrate material for mechanical stability, since optimum thicknesses (as shown in
In an embodiment having a tungsten x-ray generation layer disposed on a silicon carbide substrate, x-rays are produced in the tungsten layer and are transmitted through the silicon carbide substrate. The substrate now replaces any external filter (such as the external filter that might be used with a conventional reflection anode tube. The cylindrical anode substrate may be include any suitable material having an atomic number and thickness that may approximately match the attenuation properties of an external filter.
The silicon carbide substrate has good thermal properties for high power operation, such that it has high heat conductivity and melting temperature, and its thermal expansion is comparable to tungsten. Other materials or thicknesses may be used for this substrate, preferably such that the substrate plus any external filters provide the filtration desired for a specific radiological application.
The cylindrical transmission anode configuration illustrated in
In addition, the cylindrical transmission anode configuration enjoys a heat sink for scattered electron energy. A relatively large fraction of the incident electron energy is scattered from the focal spot into the backward hemisphere. This scattered electron energy is mostly absorbed by the outer surface of the inner heat sink 62, which has a relatively low atomic number to minimize the ratio of elastic to inelastic electron scattering. This containment avoids undesirable electric charge or heating effects that may otherwise occur in the insulator regions of the x-ray tube.
The focal spot region is located on the inner surface of a rotating cylinder. Accordingly, there is a large centrifugal force which maintains the integrity of the tungsten material in the focal spot region during any dynamic changes, such as a phase change during a microsecond temperature rise above its melting temperature or a continuous location change on the inner surface of the cylinder because of its rotating and oscillating motion. This centrifugal force may have values equal to several thousand times the acceleration of gravity depending on the diameter and rotation speed of the cylinder. (For example, with a 6 inch diameter cylinder and a rotation speed of 10000 rpm, this force is equal to approximately 8500 g, where g is 980 cm/s2). In this confining centrifugal force field, the focal spot region experiences a negligible change in the integrity of the material (such as the number of tungsten atoms), even after being cycled through a microsecond phase change that is produced by the electron energy deposition in the moving tungsten layer on the inner surface of the rotating cylindrical anode. As a consequence, the peak anode temperature may exceed the melting temperature of tungsten with no deleterious effects on the tungsten layer, and with only a negligible change in the x-ray output. Accordingly this x-ray tube may possibly be operated in regions of much greater power inputs than is permissible for present day x-ray tubes.
Also, the cylindrical transmission anode configuration enjoys dual chambers for reduction of arc discharges. High voltage x-ray tubes are prone to arc discharges because of the existence of charged particles in high gradient electric fields in the vicinity of the high temperature anode. To alleviate this condition this tube has two separate chambers: the Stefan-Boltzman cooling chamber 64 (having, for example, a relatively lower vacuum) and the electron acceleration chamber 66 (having, for example, a relatively higher vacuum). The cooling chamber 64 has the high temperature anode with surrounding charged particles in a zero-gradient electric field, and the acceleration chamber 66 has a lower temperature with fewer charged particles (not including the anode region) with a central high voltage cathode post that has axial symmetry and a reduced electric field gradient.
Referring now to
The cylindrical transmission anode depicted in
As shown in
The envelope assembly 70 is located in a suitable housing assembly 74 that contains the cooling medium 72 for the envelope such as oil or another appropriate cooling fluid. A means for providing a flow of the cooling medium 72 and some form of heat exchange system (not shown) may be included. A high voltage connection 88 is provided to connect the high voltage to the cathode assembly as well as the power for the filament. An X-ray window 90 is provided to provide a low attenuation path for the exiting X-ray generated at the anode focal spot. Optional assemblies 92 may be incorporated that form a thin flow path between the envelope external surface and the cooling medium. If this gap is made small, preferential flow properties are achieved that reduce fluid frictional forces such as achieved in journal bearing. Various means may be provided to force cooling medium through these gaps.
A motor 94 to provide the envelope rotation is provided. This may be located within the housing within the cooling medium or external to the cooling medium or housing. The rotational rate is application dependent and any rotation rate may be employed.
It will be appreciated that x-ray tubes having one of the herein described transmission anode assemblies may benefit from higher x-ray yields. As used herein, the x-ray yield refers to the x-ray output per unit electron input power. This yield may be defined as the x-ray exposure rate (in roentgens per second) per electron kilowatt input power. As an example, the exposure rate is measured by standard methods with an ionization chamber at a distance of 100 cm from the focal spot in the x-ray tube. These yields were determined by appropriate Monte Carlo calculations for both an exemplary transmission anode x-ray tube and a convention reflection anode x-ray tube.
For the transmission anode x-ray tube, it is assumed that the anode has tungsten x-ray generating layer with a thicknesses approximately equal to one-third of the range of the incident electron energy (see
Another potential advantage of the herein described transmission anode x-ray tube is a smaller focal spot size. Present-day reflection anode x-ray tubes have a line focal spot size with a projected size equal to the line width when observed at a 90 degree emission angle (see, for example
In comparison, the cone shaped beam produced by the transmission anode has axial symmetry such that the focal spot size decreases when observed over the angular region from the zero degree X-RAY EMISSION angle at the cone axis to half of the cone vertex angle. Accordingly, the transmission anode effectively reduces, if not, eliminates focal spot blooming.
Also, for reflection anode x-ray tubes, the focal spot size determines the area of the single focal track, and this area decreases as the focal spot size decreases. In comparison, the above-described rotating and oscillating cylindrical transmission anode x-ray tube transforms the single focal track area to a much larger area with increased radiation cooling. This increased area permits the same electron input power to be used even though there is a reduction in the size of the focal spot.
Another potential advantage of the herein described transmission anode x-ray tubes lies in larger vertex angles for cone-shaped x-ray beams. The transmission anode x-ray tube can provide cone-shaped x-ray beams with wider vertex angles compared to conventional reflection anode x-ray tubes. The cone-shaped beam is defined with its vertex at the anode focal spot and with its axis aligned with the incident electron beam axis. Accordingly, the cone vertex angle is not restricted by the anode heel effect as encountered in reflection anode x-ray tubes, and may be practically increased to values as large as 90 degrees. In addition, the apparent area of the focal spot decreases as the off-axis angle increases. This axial symmetry eliminates the blooming effect of the focal spot size that exists in reflection anode tubes, which may show size increases by factors of five.
Another potential advantage of the herein described transmission anode x-ray tube resides in higher electron peak input power for pulsed cone-shaped x-ray beams. The maximum permissible electron input power is determined by the requirement that the focal spot temperature does not exceed the melting temperature of the focal spot material (e.g., tungsten). With a rotating anode, the focal spot region moves along a circular focal track and reaches a peak temperature during the time period (dwell time) that it passes through the electron beam. For the remaining time in the rotation cycle, the temperature of the focal track outside the position of the electron beam is reduced to a “pre-temperature” that exists before the cycle is repeated. For short exposure times of a fraction of a second (as is the requirement for pulsed electron beams with very high input powers), the pre-temperature is negligible compared to the peak temperature, which now is approximately equal to the maximum focal spot temperature that is obtained in a rotation cycle.
The peak temperature depends on the focal spot size and the dwell time. For a cone x-ray beam, the focal spot size is assumed to be the same for both the reflection and transmission anodes. (For a fan x-ray beam, the reflection anode has a larger focal spot size because it provides a smaller projected focal spot size that is the same as that for the transmission anode). Accordingly, for a cone beam and a given electron deposition energy, the peak temperature depends only on the dwell time, such that the peak temperature is inversely proportional to the rotation speed of the rotating anode or to the product of the number of rotations per minute times the diameter of the focal track.
The maximum rotation speeds that can be obtained by present day reflection anodes are limited because these anodes have a large mass with a large heat capacity, or as in the case of the Straton tube, a smaller mass with liquid cooling for the rotating anode. Both of these conditions restrict the anode rotation such that at present the maximum rotation speed is believed to be 10,000 rpm for a 7 inch diameter anode. In comparison, the maximum rotation speed for the above-described transmission anode may be increased to at least 15,000 rpm for a 6 inch diameter anode. This means that the peak electron input power can be increased by a factor of at least 1.3 over that for the reflection anode, for the same focal spot temperature.
Another potential advantage of the herein described transmission anode x-ray tube resides in higher power x-ray beams. Compared to present day reflection anode x-ray tubes, the above-described transmission anode x-ray tube has the capability of (a) increasing the x-ray beam power (or x-ray exposure rate) by a factor of approximately 1.5 for a given electron input power and exposure time, and (b) increasing the peak electron input power by a factor of at least 1.3 for pulsed cone shaped x-ray beams. This capability is possible because the x-ray emission angle is zero with respect to the incident electron beam direction, and because the anode rotation speed is a factor of at least 1.3 higher than the speed attainable by the reflection anode tube (as described previously). As a consequence, for a given electron input power and exposure time, this transmission anode tube can produce x-ray beams with enhanced power factors greater than 1.5.
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to a certain preferred embodiment or embodiments, it is obvious that equivalent alterations and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of this specification and the annexed drawings. In particular regard to the various functions performed by the above described elements (components, assemblies, devices, compositions, etc.), the terms (including a reference to a “means”) used to describe such elements are intended to correspond, unless otherwise indicated, to any element which performs the specified function of the described element (i.e., that is functionally equivalent), even though not structurally equivalent to the disclosed structure which performs the function in the herein illustrated exemplary embodiment or embodiments of the invention. In addition, while a particular feature of the invention may have been described above with respect to only one or more of several illustrated embodiments, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other embodiments, as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application.
This application claims priority of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/745,213, filed on Apr. 20, 2006, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/745,215, filed on Apr. 20, 2006 and U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/867,618, filed on Nov. 29, 2006, each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with government support under Agreement Number MDA972-03-2-0001 awarded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The government may have certain rights in this invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2007/067112 | 4/20/2007 | WO | 00 | 1/17/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2008/060671 | 5/22/2008 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6487272 | Kutsuzawa | Nov 2002 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2002-352754 | Dec 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100111260 A1 | May 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60745213 | Apr 2006 | US | |
60745215 | Apr 2006 | US | |
60867618 | Nov 2006 | US |