LECTURE - 3 - 2 Production of X-Rays
LECTURE - 3 - 2 Production of X-Rays
RADIOLOGY By
Dr. JSP Mlatho
PHYSICS
Physics Department
University of Malawi
Box 280 Zomba , Malawi
Effects of X-rays,
matter.
Somatic Effect of Radiation: Radio sensitivity
Eavg ≈ ⅓ - ½ kVp
shells.
Characteristic Spectrum
Within each shell (other than the K shell), there are discrete
energy subshells, which result in the fine energy splitting of the
characteristic x-rays
Characteristic x-rays other than those generated by K-shell
This space charge cloud shields the electric field for tube
voltages of 40 kVp and lower, only some electrons are
accelerated towards the anode (space charge limited)
Above 40 kVp, the space charge cloud effect is overcome by
the voltage applied and tube current is limited only by the
emission of electrons from the filament (emission-limited
operation)
Tube current is 5 to 10 times less than the filament current in
the emission-limited range
Anode Configuration
Tungsten anode disk
Mo and Rh for
mammography
Stator and rotor make up the
induction motor
Rotation speeds
Low: 3,000 – 3,600 rpm
High: 9,000 – 10,000 rpm
Molybdenum stem is a poor
heat conductor and connects
the rotor to the anode to
reduce heat transfer to the
rotor bearings
Anode cooled through
radiative transmission
Focal track area (spreads heat
out over larger area than
stationary anode configuration
Anode Angle/Focal Spot Size
The anode angle is defined
as the angle of the target
surface with respect to the
central ray in the x-ray field
Anode angle range: 7° - 20°
Line focus principle
(foreshortening of the focal
spot length)
The effective focal spot
autotransformer allows
a greater range of input
to output values
X-ray Generator
Components
Diodes – either vacuum
tube or solid-state device:
e- flow in only a single
direction (cathode to anode
only)
High-Voltage power circuit
Low input voltage
High output voltage
Autotransformer allows
kVp selection
Filament circuit
Tube current (mA)
Timer sets the exposure
duration (S or mS)
manual exposure or
phototimed
Operator Console
The operator selects the tube potential [the peak kilovoltage
(kVp)], the tube current (mA), the exposure time (S) and the
focal spot size.
The kVp determines the x-ray beam quality (penetrability),
which plays a role in subject contrast.
The x-ray tube current (mA) determines the x-ray flux rate
(photons per square cm per second) emitted by the x-ray tube
at a given kVp.
mAs = mA x sec (exposure time).
Low mA selections allow small focal spot size to be used, and
higher mA settings require the use of large focal spot size due
to anode heating concerns.
Single-phase (Half-wave &
Full-wave) Rectifier Circuit
Single-Phase Rectifier Circuit
Different Types of
Generators
Single-phase
Uses single-phase input line voltage source (e.g., 220
V at 50 A)
Three-phase
Uses three voltage sources, (0, 120 and 240 deg)
Constant-Potential
Provides nearly constant voltage to the x-ray tube
High-Frequency Inverter
State-of-the-art choice
generator waveform
tube filtration
1.2 mm
Mammography: 0.1-0.3
mm
X-ray Tube Heat Loading
Heat Unit (HU)
HU = kVp ∙ mA ∙ sec ∙ factor.
HU = kVp ∙ mAs ∙ factor.
factor = 1.00 for single-phase generator.
factor = 1.35 for three-phase and high-frequency
generators.
factor = 1.40 for constant potential generators.
Energy (J) = Vrms ∙ mA ∙ sec
Vrms = 0.71 ∙ kVp (1 phase), 0.95-0.99 ∙ kVp (3 phase &
HF) and 1.0 ∙ kVp (CP).
Heat input (HU) ≈ 1.4 Heat input (J)
Single-exposure Rating Chart
Single-exposure Rating Chart
Anode Heat Input and Cooling
Chart
Housing Cooling Chart