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IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2010

Optimization of Large-Angle Pinhole Collimator for Environmental Monitoring System

Cheol-Ha Baek; Seung Jae Lee; Yong Choi; Yong Hyun Chung

The purpose of this study was to optimize a large-angle pinhole collimator using Monte Carlo simulation for nuclear survey imaging. Simulations using GATE (Geant4 Application for Tomographic Emission) were performed to model the pinhole gamma camera system. A gamma camera consists of a cone-shaped pinhole collimator with a tungsten aperture and a CsI(Tl) scintillation crystal 6.0 mm thick and 50.0 mm × 50.0 mm in area. The focal length and the acceptance angle of the pinhole collimator were set to 14.5 mm and 120°, respectively. The intrinsic spatial resolution and sensitivity were simulated by changing the pinhole diameter and channel height. The point source of Tc-99m was located 30.0 mm above the center of the pinhole, and the projection data was estimated for pinhole diameter values from 0.5 mm to 4.0 mm while the channel heights were fixed between knife-edge and 3.0 mm. The optimal ranges of channel height and pinhole diameter were determined through evaluation of the intrinsic resolution and sensitivity tradeoff curves. The simulation results allowed us to determine the optimal values of pinhole diameter and channel height to be 1.5 mm and 0.5 mm, respectively, to get intrinsic resolution below 2.0 mm FWHM with a reasonable sensitivity for the system configured in this study. The resolution and sensitivity were measured experimentally, and the simulated and measured data were in good agreement. The results demonstrated that the pinhole collimator designed in this study could be utilized to create a large-angle radiation monitoring system.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2008

A cross-stack quasi-monolithic detector with DOI capability for a small animal PET

Seung Jae Lee; Cheol-Ha Baek; Yong Hyun Chung; Yong Choi

We report on the new design of a detector module with depth of interaction (DOI) based on a quasi-monolithic LSO crystal, a multi-channel sensor, and a maximum-likelihood position-estimation (MLPE) algorithm. In our detector design, two layers of quasi-monolithic crystal elements are stacked crosswise. Each layer consists of eight crystals which are separated from each other in one direction, and are monolithic in the other direction. The size of each crystal is 2.0×16.0×10.0 mm. The light transport and detection in the cross-stack quasi-monolithic detector were modeled using DETECT2000 code, and the lookup tables (LUTs) were built using simulations. Events were well separated by applying the MLPE method with a 2.0 mm spatial resolution in the X-Y plane and for four depths in the DOI direction. The results demonstrated that the proposed detector provides dependable positioning capability for a small animal PET.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2010

Portable nuclear safeguard equipment using pinhole gamma camera

Cheol-Ha Baek; Ji Yeon Hwang; Su Jung An; H. J. Kim; Sung-Woo Kwak; Yong Hyun Chung

The collimator design for nuclear survey system should be differently taken into consideration from the collimator for medical environments because it has always been used in the high-energy radiation environments. The purpose of this study is to research the optimum pinhole design for accomplishing the improved image at high-energy radiation field under condition. The relative resolution and sensitivity advantages of pinhole collimators were investigated using analytic formulations and Monte Carlo simulations. Simulations using GATE (Geant4 Application for Tomographic Emission) were performed to model the pinhole gamma camera system. A gamma camera consists of a cone-shaped pinhole collimator with a tungsten aperture and a CsI(Tl) scintillation crystal 6.0 mm thick and 50.0 mm ´ 50.0 mm in area. The focal length and the acceptance angle of the pinhole collimator were set to 60.35 mm and 45°, respectively. The intrinsic spatial resolution and sensitivity were simulated by changing the pinhole diameter and channel height. The point source was located 60.35 mm above the center of the pinhole, and the projection data was estimated for pinhole diameter values from 2.0 mm to 4.0 mm while the channel heights were fixed between 2.0 mm and 6.0 mm. The optimal ranges of channel height and pinhole diameter were determined through evaluation of the intrinsic resolution and sensitivity tradeoff curves. The channel type is selected by these analyses and we also verify these simulation results through experimental test of three types of collimators. We allowed to determine the optimal values of pinhole diameter and channel height to be 2, 3, 4 mm and 6, 4, 6 mm, respectively. The simulated and experimental results agreed with 6% and 14% discrepancies in sensitivities and spatial resolution, respectively. The results demonstrated that the pinhole collimator designed in this study could be utilized to perform radiation monitoring system.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2009

Monte carlo simulation of four-layer DOI detector with relative offset in animal PET

Ji Yeon Hwang; Seung Jae Lee; Cheol-Ha Baek; Mikiko Ito; Sukkeun Hong; Juwon Lee; Yong-Hyun Chung

We have built a four-layer detector to obtain the depth of interaction (DOI) information in which all four layers have a relative offset of a half crystal pitch with each other. The main characteristics of the detector, especially the energy and spatial resolutions, strongly depend on the crystal surface treatments. As a part of the work for the development of an animal PET, we have investigated the effect of crystal surface treatment on the detector performances by Monte Carlo simulation, in order to optimize the surface condition of crystals composing a four-layer detector. The proposed detector consists of four LYSO layers with a crystal dimension of 1.5 mm × 1.5 mm × 7.0 mm. A simulation tool, DETECT2000, was used and validated against the experimental results, flood images acquired by prototype module. Spatial resolution and sensitivity were simulated by varying the surface treatment in crystals. In this study, the optimal surface condition of the four-layer crystals was derived for small animal PET with a view towards achieving high sensitivity as well as high and uniform radial resolution.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2009

Development of a large-angle pinhole gamma camera using depth-of-interaction detector for nuclear survey

Cheol-Ha Baek; Seung Jae Lee; Ji Yeon Hwang; Yong Choi; Yong Hyun Chung

Pinhole imaging is receiving notice as a method to enable gamma camera for nuclear survey. In our previous work, the pinhole gamma camera with depth of interaction (DOI) based on three layers of monolithic crystals and maximum-likelihood position-estimation (MLPE) algorithm was designed for the environmental monitoring and the methodology for 3D event positioning in the detector was established by using Monte Carlo simulation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of our detector module experimentally. The proposed detector module was developed by stacking three layers of monolithic CsI(Tl) crystals, each of which has a dimension of 50.0 × 50.0 × 2.0 mm3. The bottom surface of the third layer was directly coupled to an 8 × 8 channel position-sensitive photomultiplier tube (PSPMT, Hamamatsu H8500C). The PSPMT was read out using a resistive charge divider, which multiplexes 64 anodes into 8(X) + 8(Y) channels. Gaussian-based MLPE methods have been implemented by using experimentally measured detector response functions (DRFs). To measure the resolution in each DOI layer, the gamma events were generated at 25 different points over one fourth of the detector area with a spacing of 5.0 mm in the X and Y dimensions. The FWHMs obtained from the first, second, and third layers had mean values of 2.86, 2.67 and 2.87 mm, respectively. The layer misclassification rate was measured over all pixels as 21.4% for the DOI direction. In this paper, our new detector proved to be a reliable design to characterize the event position in all three dimensions with high and uniform spatial resolution and the large-angle pinhole camera could be a useful tool in the environmental monitoring.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2009

Preliminary experimental results of a quasi-monolithic detector with DOI capability for a small animal PET

Seung Jae Lee; Cheol-Ha Baek; Ji Yeon Hwang; Yong Choi; Yong Hyun Chung

In our previous work, the new detector module with depth of interaction (DOI) based on a quasi-monolithic crystal array and maximum-likelihood position-estimation (MLPE) algorithm was designed and the methodology for 3D event positioning in the detector was established by using Monte Carlo simulation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of our detector module experimentally. The detector module consisted of a 1D array of eight LYSO crystals of 2.0 (axial) × 20.0 (trans-axial) × 10.0 (depth) mm3 optically coupled to a Hamamatsu H7546B flat panel position sensitive photomultiplier tube (PSPMT). The PSPMT was read out using a resistive charge divider, which multiplexes 64 anodes into 8(X) + 8(Y) channels. Gaussian-based MLPE methods have been implemented using experimentally measured detector response functions (DRFs). The results demonstrated that the detector module could identify the position of the gamma ray interaction inside the crystal with a resolution of 2.0 mm in all three directions. The new DOI detector for a small animal PET was developed and verified experimentally with a view towards achieving high sensitivity as well as high and uniform radial resolution.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2008

New design of a quasi-monolithic detector module with DOI capability for small animal pet

Yong Hyun Chung; Seung Jae Lee; Cheol-Ha Baek; Yong Choi


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

TraPET: High performance small animal PET with trapezoidal phoswich detector

Yong Hyun Chung; Ji Yeon Hwang; Cheol-Ha Baek; Su Jung An; H. J. Kim; Kwang Hyun Kim


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

Monte Carlo simulation of a four-layer DOI detector with relative offset in animal PET

Yong Hyun Chung; Ji Yeon Hwang; Cheol-Ha Baek; Seung Jae Lee; Mikiko Ito; Jae Sung Lee; Seong Jong Hong


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2011

New design of a gamma camera detector with reduced edge effect for breast imaging

Ji Yeon Hwang; Seung Jae Lee; Cheol-Ha Baek; Kwang Hyun Kim; Yong Hyun Chung

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Yong Choi

Seoul National University

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Mikiko Ito

Seoul National University

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Jae Sung Lee

Seoul National University

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