High-energy high-dose microfocus X-ray computed tomography driven by high-average-current photo-injector
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Published:2022-01-22
Issue:1
Volume:30
Page:1-12
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ISSN:0895-3996
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Container-title:Journal of X-Ray Science and Technology
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language:
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Short-container-title:XST
Author:
Hu Dongcai1, Zhou Zheng1, Wang Jianxin1, Xiao Dexin1, Zhou Kui1, Li Peng1, Li Shigen1, Shan Lijun1, Wang Hanbin1, Liu Yu1, Shen Xuming1, Lao Chenglong1, Luo Xing1, He Tianhui1, Zhang Peng1, Yan Longgang1, Liu Jie1, Ding Yushou1, Cai Zhe1, Li Lei1, Zhang Chengxin1, Liu Qinghua1, Li Jing1, Wang Yuan1, Yang Xingfan1, Li Ming1, Wu Dai1, Chen Menxue1, Zhao Jianheng1
Affiliation:
1. Institute of Applied Electronics, China Academy of Engineering Physics (CAEP), Mianyang, China
Abstract
High-energy, high-dose, microfocus X-ray computed tomography (HHM CT) is one of the most effective methods for high-resolution X-ray radiography inspection of high-density samples with fine structures. Minimizing the effective focal spot size of the X-ray source can significantly improve the spatial resolution and the quality of the sample images, which is critical and important for the performance of HHM CT. The objective of this study is to present a 9 MeV HHM CT prototype based on a high-average-current photo-injector in which X-rays with about 70μm focal spot size are produced via using tightly focused electron beams with 65/66μm beam size to hit an optimized tungsten target. In digital radiography (DR) experiment using this HHM CT, clear imaging of a standard 0.1 mm lead DR resolution phantom reveals a resolution of 6 lp/mm (line pairs per mm), while a 5 lp/mm resolution is obtained in CT mode using another resolution phantom made of 10 mm ferrum. Moreover, comparing with the common CT systems, a better turbine blade prototype image was obtained with this HHM CT system, which also indicates the promising application potentials of HHM CT in non-destructive inspection or testing for high-density fine-structure samples.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Condensed Matter Physics,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Instrumentation,Radiation
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