6533b7d7fe1ef96bd12685d2
RESEARCH PRODUCT
A prototype of very high resolution small animal PET scanner using silicon pad detectors
Carlos LacastaK. HonscheidAndrej StudenW. Leslie RogersHarris KaganD. BurdetteS.-j. ParkE. ChesiGabriela LlosaS.s. HuhP. WeilhammerP. WeilhammerMarko MikuzNeal H. Clinthornesubject
PhysicsNuclear and High Energy Physicsmedicine.medical_specialtySiliconbusiness.industryDetectorResolution (electron density)chemistry.chemical_elementCollimatorChipLine sourceArticlelaw.inventionOpticschemistrylawmedicineWaferMedical physicsbusinessInstrumentationImage resolutiondescription
Abstract A very high-resolution small animal positron emission tomograph (PET), which can achieve sub-millimeter spatial resolution, is being developed using silicon pad detectors. The prototype PET for a single slice instrument consists of two 1 mm thick silicon pad detectors, each containing a 32×16 array of 1.4×1.4 mm pads readout with four VATAGP3 chips which have 128 channels low-noise self-triggering ASIC in each chip, coincidence units, a source turntable and tungsten slice collimator. The silicon detectors were located edgewise on opposite sides of a 4 cm field-of-view to maximize efficiency. Energy resolution is dominated by electronic noise, which is 0.98% (1.38 keV) FWHM at 140.5 keV. Coincidence timing resolution is 82.1 ns FWHM and coincidence efficiency was measured to be 1.04×10 −3 % from two silicon detectors with annihilation photons of 18 F source. Image data were acquired and reconstructed using conventional 2-D filtered-back projection (FBP) and a maximum likelihood expectation maximization (ML-EM) method. Image resolution of approximately 1.45 mm FWHM is obtained from 1-D profile of 1.1 mm diameter 18 F line source image. Even better resolution can be obtained with smaller detector element sizes. While many challenges remain in scaling up the instrument to useful efficiency including densely packed detectors and significantly improved timing resolution, performance of the test setup in terms of easily achieving sub-millimeter resolution is compelling.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007-01-21 |