• DocumentCode
    861605
  • Title

    A new pileup-prevention front-end electronic design for high-resolution PET and gamma cameras

  • Author

    Li, Hongdi ; Wong, Wai-Hoi ; Uribe, Jorge ; Baghaei, Hossain ; Liu, Yaqiang ; Wang, Yu ; Xing, Tao ; Aykac, Mehmet

  • Author_Institution
    M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, Texas Univ., Houston, TX, USA
  • Volume
    49
  • Issue
    5
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    10/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    2051
  • Lastpage
    2056
  • Abstract
    A new method for processing signals from Anger position-sensitive detectors used in gamma cameras and positron emission tomography (PET) is proposed for very high count-rate imaging. It has a same concept as high yield pileup-event recover (HYPER) method we introduced before by using 1) dynamically integrating a present event, the integrating will stop immediately before the next event is detected; 2) estimating a weighted-value to indicate the total energy inside the scintillation detector; and 3) remnant correction to remove the residual energy of all the previous events from the weighted-value. This paper introduces two improved practical techniques to get a better weighted-value with low noise sensitivity in order to improve the final pileup-free energy resolution. One applies a low-pass filter combined with multiple sampling to a weight-sum of the instantaneous signal and integrated signal. The other one is weighting the integration value of the income signal; the weighting also includes exponential distortion compensation. This paper also describes the application of the HYPER electronics in a high resolution low cost PET camera with 12 photomultipliers (PMTs)-quadrant-sharing (PQS) detector modules that can decode 38 016 bismuth-germinate (BGO) crystal elements using 924 PMTs. Each detector module has four Anger-HYPER circuits to further increase the count-rate. To use the HYPER circuit in coincidence imaging applications, there is a serious synchronization problem between the arrival time of an event and the end time of integration that is variable from event to event. This synchronization problem is solved by a field programmable gate array (FPGA) circuit with real time remnant correction and a high-resolution trigger delay unit with a small dead-time for recovering the synchronization of data and the event-trigger.
  • Keywords
    field programmable gate arrays; low-pass filters; nuclear electronics; photomultipliers; positron emission tomography; solid scintillation detectors; synchronisation; Anger-HYPER circuits; FPGA; HYPER electronics; PET camera; coincidence imaging; energy resolution; field programmable gate array; gamma cameras; low-pass filter; noise sensitivity; photomultipliers; pileup-prevention front-end electronics; quadrant-sharing detector; synchronization; weighted-value; Cameras; Circuits; Field programmable gate arrays; Gamma ray detection; Gamma ray detectors; High-resolution imaging; Optical imaging; Position sensitive particle detectors; Positron emission tomography; Signal processing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9499
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNS.2002.803804
  • Filename
    1046788