PRISMATOID LIGHT GUIDE
20220120923 · 2022-04-21
Inventors
- Amirhossein GOLDAN (Stony Brook, NY, US)
- Andrew LABELLA (New Rochelle, NY, US)
- Wei ZHAO (East Setauket, NY, US)
- Anthony LUBINSKY (Port Jefferson Station, NY, US)
Cpc classification
G01T1/1642
PHYSICS
G01T1/2985
PHYSICS
G01T1/1644
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Provided area device for detecting sub-atomic particles and method of fabrication thereof. The device includes a plurality of scintillators, a detector provided on a first end of the plurality of scintillators and a prismatoid provided on a second end of the plurality of scintillators. The prismatoid redirects light between adjacent scintillators of the plurality of scintillators.
Claims
1. A device for detecting sub-atomic particles, the device comprising: a plurality of scintillators; at least one detector provided on a first end of the scintillator; and a prismatoid provided on a second end of the scintillator, wherein the prismatoid is configured to redirect light between a first pair of adjacent scintillators of the plurality of scintillators.
2. The device of claim 1, wherein the prismatoid comprises at least one reflective surface for redirecting travel of at least one sub-atomic particle emitted from at least one scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein the travel of the at least one sub-atomic particle is redirected from an emitting scintillator toward another scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the prismatoid is substantially shaped as at least one of at least one prism, at least one antiprism, at least one frustum, at least one triangle, at least one cupola, at least one parallelepiped, at least one wedge, at least one pyramid, at least one truncated pyramid, and at least one portion of a sphere.
5. The device of claim 1, further comprising a second pair of adjacent scintillators, wherein a first scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators is adjacent to a first scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators, and wherein the first scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators shares a first detector of the at least one detector with the first scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
6. The device of claim 5, wherein a second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators is adjacent to a second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators, and wherein the second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators shares a second detector of the at least one detector with the second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein the prismatoid is configured to redirect light from the first scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators to at least one of the second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators, the first scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators, and the second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
8. The device of claim 1, wherein each scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators comprises a first interior side and a second interior side substantially parallel with the first interior side.
9. The device of claim 8, wherein the first interior side and the second interior side are configured to reflect light therebetween, for transmitting substantially all of the light from the prismatoid to the at least one detector.
10. The device of claim 1, wherein the at least one detector comprises at least one pixilated sensor.
11. The device of claim 10, wherein the device further comprises at least one processor configured to communicate with the at least one pixilated sensor to perform positron emission tomography (PET) by sensing at least one photon.
12. An prismatoid comprising: a reflective surface configured to redirect travel of at least one photon emitted from at least one scintillator of a pair of scintillators adjacent to the reflective surface, wherein the travel of the at least one photon is redirected from the at least one scintillator of a first pair of scintillators toward another scintillator of the first pair of scintillators.
13. The prismatoid of claim 12, wherein at least one detector is provided on an end of the first pair of scintillators opposite the reflective surface, and wherein a second pair of adjacent scintillators is provided with a first scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators sharing a first detector of the at least one detector with a first scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
14. The prismatoid of claim 13, wherein a second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators is adjacent to a second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators, and wherein the second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators shares a second detector of the plurality of detectors with the second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
15. The prismatoid of claim 12, wherein the prismatoid is configured to redirect light from a first scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators to at least one of a second scintillator of the first pair of adjacent scintillators, a first scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators, and a second scintillator of the second pair of adjacent scintillators.
16. The prismatoid of claim 15, wherein each scintillator of at least two adjacent scintillators of the pair of scintillators comprises a first interior side and a second interior side substantially parallel with the first interior side, and wherein the first interior side and the second interior side are configured to reflect light therebetween, for transmitting substantially all of the light from the prismatoid to at least one detector.
17. The prismatoid of claim 12, wherein the prismatoid is substantially shaped as at least one of at least one prism, at least one antiprism, at least one frustum, at least one triangle, at least one cupola, at least one parallelepiped, at least one wedge, at least one pyramid, at least one truncated pyramid, and at least one portion of a sphere.
18. A system for non-invasive medical imaging, the system comprising: at least one prismatoid; at least one detector; and a scintillator array, wherein the at least one prismatoid is configured to redirect light between adjacent scintillators of scintillator array, wherein the at least one detector is provided on an end of the scintillator array opposite the at least one prismatoid, and wherein the at least one prismatoid is substantially shaped as at least one of at least one prism, at least one antiprism, at least one frustum, at least one triangle, at least one cupola, at least one parallelepiped, at least one wedge, at least one pyramid, at least one truncated pyramid, and at least one portion of a sphere.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein the system is configured to perform positron emission tomography (PET) with a single-sided depth-of-interaction (DOI) readout having high coincidence time resolution (CTR) and high-count rate.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the scintillator array, the at least one prismatoid, and the at least one detector are asymmetrically aligned, and wherein a first detector of the at least one detector abuts a second detector of the at least one detector, to extend an area for performing the PET.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] The above and other aspects, features and advantages of certain embodiments of the present invention will be more apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
[0028] The following detailed description of certain embodiments of the present invention will be made with reference to the accompanying drawings. In describing the invention, explanation about related functions or constructions known in the art are omitted for the sake of clarity, to avoid obscuring the invention with unnecessary detail.
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[0032] Each scintillator 211, 212, 213, 214 may include a first interior side 211a, 212a and a second interior side 211c, 212c. The second interior side 211c, 212c may be substantially parallel with the respective first interior side 211a, 212a, and the first interior side 211a, 212a and the second interior side 211c, 212c run substantially from the first end 211d to the second end 211b, thereby providing an interior light guide 211g, 212g between each respective first side 211a, 212a and second side 211c, 212c configured to reflect light therebetween, for transmitting substantially all of the light from respective prismatoids 120 of the prism light guide 100 to respective detectors 300. The interior light guide reflects substantially all light within respective scintillators 211, 212, 213, 214 traveling from respective prismatoids 120 to respective detectors 130. As illustrated in
[0033] The prismatoid 120 provides stabilized light guide geometry at the first end face 211d of the scintillator array 100. The prismatoid light guide 100 reflects light, without functioning as a high-energy photon detector. As illustrated in
[0034] At least two SiPM pixels 380a, 380b of the detector 300 are coupled to a respective prismatoid 120 via scintillator crystals 211, 212, 213, 214, to enable differential single-sided readout for DOI capabilities.
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[0036] The controlled light sharing of the present disclosure increases system-level count rate. In contrast, in a uniform light guide, each scintillation event requires readout from all SiPM pixels to calculate the DOI and perform centroiding, since light is expected to be shared across all scintillators. On the other hand, the prismatoid light guide of the present disclosure provides precise identification of which scintillator columns will share light with each other. Scintillators will only share light with columns coupled to a same prismatoid. As illustrated, each non-peripheral prismatoid is coupled to at least four scintillators, which belong to anywhere from at least two to four SiPM pixels depending on the detector array geometry. As a result, readout is only required for a smaller subset of pixels at a time for each scintillation event, enabling simultaneous readout in other parts of the detector array, thereby increasing the system-level count rate when compared with the count rate of a detector system using a conventional uniform light guide.
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[0040] Increased uniformity of Anger logic centroiding resolution throughout the detector array is provided, since light is purposely directed to other pixels. In contrast, in conventional uniform light guides do not specifically couple or purposely direct light to specific other SiPM pixels. Also, conventional uniform light guides introduce edge effects where centroiding resolution decreases drastically along the edges of the scintillator array. In contrast, the configuration of the first prismatoid 410, the second prismatoid 420 and the third prismatoid 430 is completely symmetrical regarding light sharing between scintillators and eliminates edge effects in conventional systems. See,
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[0043] Comparison of the ray traces of
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[0045] As shown in the conventional planar uniform light guide of
[0046] As shown in
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[0048] A method of fabrication is provided that includes affixing the prismatoid light guide onto one end of a scintillator, which may be provided as a block of scintillator crystals, with the detector module affixed to an opposite end of the scintillator. The prismatoid 120 may be deposited on the one end of the scintillator array by sputtering. The prismatoid may also be removably attached to the one end of the scintillator. The scintillators may be polished and then de-polished along lateral faces thereof to introduce roughness and improve DOI resolution by creating differential light sharing along the lateral faces as a function of gamma ray interaction depth.
[0049] While the invention has been shown and described with reference to certain aspects thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims and equivalents thereof. No recitation of any claim set forth below is to be construed as a means plus function element without express use of “means for” or “step for.”