2015): A prototype of aerial radiation monitoring system using an unmanned helicopter mounting a GAGG scintillator Compton camera, Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology, Due to the accident of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, some areas were contaminated by released radioisotopes (mainly 137 Cs and 134 Cs). Effective decontamination is demanded to encourage evacuated people to return. This paper proposes a new survey system using an unmanned helicopter equipped with a Compton camera for localizing radionuclides. As a prototype, 32 Ce:Gd 3 (Al,Ga) 5 O 12 (GAGG) crystals were coupled to 16 silicon photomultipliers and 16 avalanched photodiodes as the scatterer and absorber, respectively. A new Dynamic Time-over-Threshold (dToT) method was applied to convert CR-RC shaping signals to digital signals for multi-channel spectra and coincidence acquisition. The system was designed to work in two modes: one is Compton-camera mode (CCM) which obtains the radiation distribution maps through Compton imaging using hovering flights, while the other one is Gamma-camera mode (GCM) which maps the radiation distribution via measured coincidence events using programmed flights. For point source in CCM, an intrinsic efficiency of 1.68% with a combined standard uncertainty of 0.04% and an angular resolution of about 14 • (FWHM, full width at half maximum) was achieved. In GCM, a spatial resolution of about 11 cm (FWHM) was obtained when detecting area is 11.2 cm away from the detector, while it was about 28 cm (FWHM) in single detector mode (SDM). Promising results were obtained in field in Fukushima.
The time over threshold (TOT) method has several advantages over direct pulse height analysis based on analog to digital converters (ADCs). A key advantage is the simplicity of the conversion circuit which leads to a high level of integration and a low power consumption. The TOT technique is well suited to build multi-channel readout systems for pixelated detectors as described in our previous work that also exploits the Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) method. The main limitation of the TOT technique is that the relation between the input charge to be measured and the width of the encoded pulse is strongly non-linear. Dynamic range limitation is also an issue. To address these aspects, we propose a new time over threshold conversion circuit where the threshold of the comparator is dynamically changed instead of being constant. We call this scheme the "dynamic TOT method". We show that it improves linearity and dynamic range. It also shortens the duration of measured pulses leading to higher counting rates. We present a short analysis that explains how the ideal linear input charge to TOT transfer function can theoretically be obtained. We describe the results obtained with a test circuit built from discrete components and present several of the spectrums obtained with crystal detectors and a radioactive source. The proposed method can be used for applications like Positron Emission Tomography (PET) that require moderate energy resolution.Index Terms-Dynamic time over threshold (TOT), positron emission tomography (PET), pulse width modulation (PWM), time over threshold (TOT).
Positron-emission tomography (PET) and single-photon-emission computed tomography (SPECT) are well-established nuclear-medicine imaging methods used in modern medical diagnoses. Combining PET with 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) and SPECT with an 111In-labelled ligand provides clinicians with information about the aggressiveness and specific types of tumors. However, it is difficult to integrate a SPECT system with a PET system because SPECT requires a collimator. Herein, we describe a novel method that provides simultaneous imaging with PET and SPECT nuclides by combining PET imaging and Compton imaging. The latter is an imaging method that utilizes Compton scattering to visualize gamma rays over a wide range of energies without requiring a collimator. Using Compton imaging with SPECT nuclides, instead of the conventional SPECT imaging method, enables PET imaging and Compton imaging to be performed with one system. In this research, we have demonstrated simultaneous in vivo imaging of a tumor-bearing mouse injected with 18F-FDG and an 111In-antibody by using a prototype Compton-PET hybrid camera. We have succeeded in visualizing accumulations of 18F-FDG and 111In-antibody by performing PET imaging and Compton imaging simultaneously. As simultaneous imaging utilizes the same coordinate axes, it is expected to improve the accuracy of diagnoses.
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