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Anode angle. Anode angle defined as the angle of the target surface with respect to the central ray in the x-ray fieldAnode angles in diagnostic x-ray tubes range from 7 to 20 degrees, with 12- to 15-degree angles most common. Focal spot size. Actual focal spot size is the area on the anode that is struck by electronsPrimarily determined by length of cathode filament and width of focusing cup slotEffective focal spot size is the length and width of the focal spot projected down the central ra9453
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1. Diagnostic Radiology II X-ray Tubes
3. Focal spot size Actual focal spot size is the area on the anode that is struck by electrons
Primarily determined by length of cathode filament and width of focusing cup slot
Effective focal spot size is the length and width of the focal spot projected down the central ray in the x-ray field
5. Focal spot size (cont.) Effective focal spot width is equal to the actual focal spot width
Effective focal length = actual focal length ? sin ?
Foreshortening of the focal spot length, as viewed down the central ray, is called the line focus principle
7. Anode angles Optimal anode angle depends on the clinical imaging application
Small anode angle desirable for small field-of-view image receptors (cineangiographic and neuroangiographic equipment, where field coverage is limited by the image intensifier diameter)
Large anode angles necessary for general radiographic work to achieve large field area coverage at short focal spot-to-image distances
8. Variation with position Effective focal spot length varies with the position in the image plane, in the anode-cathode direction
In the width dimension, the focal spot size does not change appreciably with position in the image plane
Nominal size specified at the central ray of the beam
10. Measuring focal spot size Pinhole camera
Slit camera
Star pattern
Resolution bar pattern
11. Pinhole camera Very small circular aperture (10 to 30 ?m diameter) in a disk made of a thin, highly attenuating metal such as lead, tungsten, or gold
Image of focal spot recorded with the pinhole camera positioned on the central axis between the x-ray source and the detector
13. Slit camera The slit camera consists of a plate made of a highly attenuating metal (often tungsten) with a thin slit (typically 10 ?m wide)
Measuring the width of the distribution on the image yields one dimension of the focal spot
Second radiograph, taken with the slit perpendicular to the first, yields the other dimension of the focal spot
15. Star pattern Star pattern test tool contains a radial pattern of lead spokes of diminishing width and spacing on a thin plastic disk
Imaging the star pattern at a known magnification and measuring the distance between the outermost blur patterns on the image provides an estimate of the resolving power of the focal spot in the directions perpendicular to and parallel to the anode-cathode axis
17. Resolution bar pattern Similar to the star pattern tool, but containing radioopaque bars of varying widths and spacings
Bar pattern images demonstrate the effective resolution parallel and perpendicular to the anode-cathode axis for a given magnification geometry
19. Heel effect The heel effect refers to a reduction in the x-ray beam intensity toward the anode side of the x-ray field
For a given field size, the heel effect is less prominent with a longer source-to-image distance (SID)
X-ray tube best positioned with the cathode over the thicker parts of the patient to balance the transmitted x-ray photons incident on the image receptor
21. Tube housing X-ray tube housing supports, insulates and protects the x-ray tube insert
Oil in the housing provides heat conduction and electrical insulation
Lead shielding inside the housing attenuates the x-rays that are emitted in all directions
Regulations limit the maximum leakage exposure rate (0.1% @ 1m of the exposure rate at the same distance on the central axis of the useful beam)
23. Grid-biased tubes Focusing cup is electrically insulated from the cathode filament
Approximately –2,000 V applied to focusing cup shuts off the tube current; turning off the grid bias allows tube current to flow and x-rays to be produced
Used in applications such as pulsed fluoroscopy and cineangiocardiography
24. Filtration In general diagnostic radiology, added filters attenuate the low-energy x-rays in the spectrum that have virtually no chance of penetrating the patient and reaching the x-ray detector
Patient radiation dose is reduced
Aluminum is the most commonly added filter material
Regulations prescribe minimum filtration (e.g., 2.5 mm Al for machines designed to operate at potentials above 70 kVp)
25. Compensators Compensators are added filtration with a shape intended to change the spatial pattern of the x-ray intensity incident on the patient, so as to deliver a more uniform x-ray exposure to the detector
Placed close to the x-ray tube port or just external to the collimator assembly
26. Collimators Collimators adjust the size and shape of the x-ray field emerging from the tube port
Adjustable parallel-opposed lead shutters define the x-ray field
Positive beam limitation collimators automatically limit the field size to the useful area of the detector