A synchrotron radiation beamline devoted to medical imaging has been built by the SYRMEP collaboration at Elettra in Trieste, Italy, and is now in operation. The SYRMEP imaging system is based on the combination of a monochromatic, laminar X-ray beam, with a laminar, high-efficiency pixel silicon detector. To image soft tissue, including small, low-contrast details, as in mammography, beam energies should be chosen in the range from 15 keV to 30 keV and the detector should be capable of single-photon counting. The SYRMEP beamline originates from a bending magnet light port and consists basically of a Be window, a slit system and a Si(1,1,1) crystal monochromator. The experimental area is equipped with a radiation flux monitor, a sample movement stage, and a positioning system holding the silicon detector. Images are obtained by keeping the detector stationary with respect to the beam and by scanning the sample through the beam itself. The current detector is a linear array of 200×300 μm2 pixels, each coupled to its electronic counting chain on a custom VLSI read-out chip. We present a summary of beam studies, and digital images of standard RMI 160 and RMI 180 Ackermann Mammographic phantoms. Results show the high contrast resolution, the good spatial resolution and the large dynamic range which constitute the defining characteristics of the SYRMEP imaging system.
Arfelli, F., Barbiellini, G., Bonvicini, V., Bravin, A., Cantatore, G., Castelli, E., et al. (1996). The digital mammography program at the SR light source in Trieste. In Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium. Part 1 (of 3) (pp.1089-1093). IEEE [10.1109/NSSMIC.1996.591562].
The digital mammography program at the SR light source in Trieste
Bravin A;
1996
Abstract
A synchrotron radiation beamline devoted to medical imaging has been built by the SYRMEP collaboration at Elettra in Trieste, Italy, and is now in operation. The SYRMEP imaging system is based on the combination of a monochromatic, laminar X-ray beam, with a laminar, high-efficiency pixel silicon detector. To image soft tissue, including small, low-contrast details, as in mammography, beam energies should be chosen in the range from 15 keV to 30 keV and the detector should be capable of single-photon counting. The SYRMEP beamline originates from a bending magnet light port and consists basically of a Be window, a slit system and a Si(1,1,1) crystal monochromator. The experimental area is equipped with a radiation flux monitor, a sample movement stage, and a positioning system holding the silicon detector. Images are obtained by keeping the detector stationary with respect to the beam and by scanning the sample through the beam itself. The current detector is a linear array of 200×300 μm2 pixels, each coupled to its electronic counting chain on a custom VLSI read-out chip. We present a summary of beam studies, and digital images of standard RMI 160 and RMI 180 Ackermann Mammographic phantoms. Results show the high contrast resolution, the good spatial resolution and the large dynamic range which constitute the defining characteristics of the SYRMEP imaging system.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.