X Ray Production Flashcards

1
Q

x ray tube components

A
  1. glass envelope - vacuum inside
  2. cathode (-ve) - filament & focusing cup
  3. anode (+ve) - target, heat dissipating block
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2
Q

cathode filament

A

made of tungsten -
high atomic no - lots of electrons per atom
high mpt - able to withstand high temp
malleable

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3
Q

cathode focusing cup

A

made of molybdenum
negatively charged to repel electrons released at filament & focus them to anode target

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4
Q

anode target

A

made of tungsten (high mpt)
metal block bombarded by electrons, produces photons (x ray ones of useful energies)
off angle in relation to filament - important

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5
Q

anode heat dissipating block

A

target embedded in block of copper - high mpt and high thermal conductivity
reduces risk of over heating

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6
Q

focal spot

A

precise area on anode target where electrons collide & x rays are produced i.e. x ray source

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7
Q

omnidirectional emission of divergent x ray photons

A

multi directional imaging of divergent x ray photons means when you have electrons being produced at filament they accelerate out towards the target, colliding at the focal spot

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8
Q

penumbra effect

A

blurring of radiographic image due to focal spot not being a single point but a small area
minimised by shrinking size of focal spot
shrinking it will increase image quality but also heat concentration therefore must angle it

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9
Q

why angle anode target

A
  • increases actual SA where electrons impact so better heat tolerance
  • reduces apparent SA from where x ray beam is emitted so decreases penumbra effect
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10
Q

purpose of glass envelope

A
  1. air tight enclosure - supports cathode & anode, maintains vacuum so electrons can travel from cathode to anode unhindered by gas molecules
  2. leaded - to absorb x ray photos, except for unleaded window, ensures only x ray photons travelling in desired direction can escape x ray tube
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11
Q

main components of tube head

A

x ray tube
metal shielding - usually lead
aluminium filtration
oil - dissipates heat by thermal convection
spacer cone

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12
Q

aluminium filtration

A

removes lower energy (non diagnostic) x rays from beam as they would be absorbed by tissues but not contribute to image
aluminium thickness required -
<70kV = 1.5mm
>70kV = 2.5mm

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13
Q

spacer cone

A

dictates distance between focal spot & ptx i.e. FSD - focus to skin distance
increasing FSD reduces divergence of x ray beam but reduces magnification & intensity
indicates direction of beam
may be detachable
>60kV FSD must be 200mm

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14
Q

fate of x ray photons emitted from focal spot

A
  1. attenuated by lead shielding
  2. attenuated by aluminium filtration
  3. exit tube head to form x ray beam
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15
Q

collimator

A

lead diaphragm attached to end of spacer cone to reduce ptx dose
crops x ray beam to match size & shape of x ray receptor from circular to rectangular

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16
Q

rectangular collimation

A

can reduce effective dose to the patient by approx 50%

17
Q

consequences of electron bombarding target

A

heat production - loses kinetic energy which is converted to heat which is dissipated
x ray production - <1% interactions - deflected from nucleus & loses kinetic energy in from of x ray photons

18
Q

continuous radiation spectrum

A

increase proximity of electron to nucleus -> increase deflection -> increase energy release so greater proportion of lower energy photons. max energy achieved when electron collides with nucleus and stops completely
have to remove non diagnostic lower energy x ray photons from beam

19
Q

characteristic radiation

A

bombarding electron collides with an inner shell one to displace it (excitation) or completely remove it (ionisation) remaining electrons drop to lower shell to fill space and x ray photons begin to get released as they lose binding energy

20
Q

continuous v characteristic radiation

A

continuous - produces continuous range of x ray photon energies, max photon energy matches peak voltage, bombarding electron interacts with nucleus of target atom

characteristic - produces specific energies of x ray photon characteristic to element used for the target, photon energies depend on binding energies of electron shells, bombarding electron interacts with inner shell electrons of target atom

21
Q

dental x ray beam spectrum

A

x ray beam = continuous radiation + characteristic radiation - filtered photons