학술논문

Characterization of a Small Animal PET Detector Block Incorporating a Digital Photon Counter Array
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on. 62(3):732-739 Jun, 2015
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Bioengineering
Crystals
Arrays
Energy resolution
Temperature measurement
Detectors
Positron emission tomography
Photonics
Digital photon counter
dual layer offset crystal block
small animal PET
Language
ISSN
0018-9499
1558-1578
Abstract
A Small Animal PET detector block made with a Dual Layer Offset crystal array with 1.27 mm wide LYSO crystals on a Philips PDC3200-22-44 Digital Photon Counter (DPC) array was characterized while operating near room temperature. Crystal map peak to valley ratio, energy resolution, and timing resolution were characterized as a function of various device settings of the DPC and temperature. In addition, rates of count loss due to the phenomena of incomplete neighbor logic and dark-readout deadtime were measured. Device settings of interest were: Trigger scheme–defining the threshold of when a DPC will generate a timestamp and enter a readout cycle, inhibit fraction–the fraction of noisy cells which are disabled, and RTL-refresh–a setting which reduces the probability of the DPC being triggered from dark noise. At 15$^\circ {\rm C}$, peak to valley ratios were measured to be around 11, and energy resolution around 11.5% regardless of device settings. Timing resolution ranged from near 300 ps to 1.5 ns. Count loss from dark readout deadtime was insignificant compared to incomplete neighbor logic, which ranged from as high as 95% to 5% of coincidences. It was found that trade-offs had to be made between timing resolution and count loss. With the most optimal device settings for small animal PET, a timing resolution of 1.4 ns and coincidence losses of 5% were achieved. At these settings, the detector block had little sensitivity to a 5$^\circ {\rm C}$ temperature fluctuation.