The present application is a national stage application of PCT/GB2004/001731, filed on Apr. 23, 2004. The present application further relies on Great Britain Patent Application Number 0309371.3, filed on Apr. 25, 2003, for priority.
The present invention relates to X-ray tubes and in particular to controlling the amount of heat produced in the tube housing.
It is known to provide an X-ray tube which comprises an electron emitter and a metal anode where the anode is held at a positive potential (say 100 kV) with respect to the electron emitter. Electrons from the emitter accelerate under the influence of the electric field towards the anode. On reaching the anode, the electron loses some or all of its kinetic energy to the anode with over 99% of this energy being released as heat. Careful design of the anode is required to remove this heat.
Electrons that backscatter from the anode at low initial energy travel back down the lines of electrical potential towards the electron source until their kinetic energy drops to zero. They are then accelerated back towards the anode where their kinetic energy results in generation of further heat (or X-radiation).
Electrons that scatter from the anode at higher energies can escape the lines of electrical potential that terminate at the anode and start to travel towards the tube housing. In most X-ray tubes, the electrons can reach the housing with high kinetic energy and the localised heating of the housing that results can lead to tube failure.
The present invention provides an X-ray tube comprising, a cathode arranged to provide a source of electrons, an anode held at a positive potential with respect to the cathode and arranged to accelerate electrons from the cathode such that they will impact on the anode thereby to produce X-rays, and a retardation electrode held at a negative potential with respect to the anode thereby to produce an electric field between the anode and the retardation electrode which can slow down electrons scattered from the anode thereby reducing the amount of heat they can generate in the tube.
Preferably the retardation electrode is held at a positive potential with respect to the cathode.
Preferably the retardation electrode forms part of an electrical circuit so that electrons collected by the retardation electrode can be conducted away from it thereby maintaining its potential substantially constant.
The X-ray tube may include a housing enclosing the anode and the cathode, and at least a part of the housing may form the retardation electrode. Alternatively the retardation electrode may be located between the anode and the housing thereby to slow down electrons before they reach the housing.
The anode is preferably supported on a backing layer of lower atomic number than the anode. Preferably the anode has a thickness of the order of 5 microns or less.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a is a graph showing the attenuation characteristics of a retardation electrode of the tube of
b is a graph showing the energies of X-rays produced by an anode of the tube of
Referring to
In use, electrons 11 generated at the cathode 12 are accelerated as an electron beam 13 towards the anode 14 by the electric field between the cathode 12 and anode 14. Some electrons 11 interact with the anode 14 through the photoelectric effect to produce X-rays 15, which can be collected through the first windows 16, in a direction parallel with the incident electron beam 13, or through the second window 18, in a direction substantially perpendicular to the direction of the incident electron beam 13. X-rays are actually emitted from the anode in substantially all directions, and therefore need to be blocked by the housing 10 in all areas apart from the windows 16, 18.
The more energetic an electron, the more likely it is to interact with the anode 14 through the photoelectric effect. Consequently, the first interaction of any electron with the anode 14 is the one most likely to yield a fluorescence photon. An electron that scatters in the target has a probability of generating a bremsstrahlung X-ray photon, but the photon will usually be lower in energy than a fluorescence photon (especially from a high atomic number target such as tungsten). Therefore, for most imaging applications, X-rays resulting from photoelectric interactions are preferred.
Using Monte Carlo studies it is possible to show that virtually all fluorescence photons arise from the first electron interaction in the target 14. If the first interaction does not result in a fluorescence photon, it is very unlikely that any subsequent interaction will result in a fluorescence photon either. In high atomic number materials such as tungsten, the first electron interaction typically occurs very near to the anode surface e.g. within 1 micron of the surface. Therefore, it is advantageous to use the thin target 14 so that the ratio of fluorescence to bremsstrahlung radiation is maximised. Further, the heat dissipated in such a thin target 14 is low.
Electrons that do not interact in the thin target 14 will normally continue in the same straight line trajectory that they were following in the beam 13 as they entered the target 14 from the electron source 12. Electrons that pass through the anode 14 will slow down as they are retarded by the strength of the electric field in the region behind the anode 14, caused by the electrical potential between the anode 14 and the retardation electrode 20. When the electrons interact in the retardation electrode 20, they have low kinetic energy and consequently only a small thermal energy is deposited in the electrode. In this embodiment where the additional electrode is at a potential of 10 kV with respect to the electron source 12 but where the anode 14 is at 100 kV with respect to the electron source 12, then total thermal power dissipation in the X-ray tube will be around 10% of that in a conventional thick target X-ray source.
X-rays passing through the window 16 also have to pass through the retardation electrode 20. In this case it is important to ensure that the retardation electrode 20 blocks as few of the X-rays produced in the anode 14 as possible. Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
To set the potential of the retardation electrode 220, the retardation electrode 220 is electrically isolated from all elements in the tube and then connected to the anode 214 potential +HV by means of a resistor R. As electrons reach the retardation electrode 220, a current I will flow through the resistor R back to the anode power supply and the potential of the electrode will fall to be negative with respect to the anode. In this situation, the retardation electrode potential will be affected by the operational characteristics of the tube and will to some degree be self adjusting. Such an approach can also be used with retardation electrodes as shown in
Referring to
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