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Diagnostic Radiology IV Factors affecting x-ray emission Power ratings and heat loading Factors affecting x-ray emission Output of an x-ray tube described by the terms quality, quantity and exposure Quality describes penetrability of an x-ray beam
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Diagnostic Radiology IV Factors affecting x-ray emission Power ratings and heat loading
Factors affecting x-ray emission • Output of an x-ray tube described by the terms quality, quantity and exposure • Quality describes penetrability of an x-ray beam • Quantity refers to the number of photons comprising the beam • Exposure is nearly proportional to the energy fluence of the x-ray beam and therefore has quality and quantity associated characteristics
Factors (cont.) • X-ray production efficiency, exposure, quality and quantity are determined by: • X-ray tube target material • Voltage • Current • Exposure time • Beam filtration • Generator waveform
Target (anode) material • Affects efficiency of bremsstrahlung radiation production • Output exposure roughly proportional to atomic number • Energies of characteristic x-rays depend on target material • Target material affects quantity of bremsstrahlung radiation and the quality of characteristic radiation
Tube voltage (kVp) • Determines the maximum energy in the bremsstrahlung spectrum and affects the quality of the output spectrum • Efficiency of x-ray production is directly related to tube voltage • Exposure approximately proportional to the square of the kVp in the diagnostic range:
Tube voltage (cont.) • Changes in kVp must be compensated by corresponding changes in mAs to maintain the same exposure • Additional consideration of technique adjustment concerns the x-ray attenuation characteristics of the patient • To achieve equal transmitted exposure through a typical patient, the mAs varies with the fifth power of the kVp ratio:
Tube current (mA) • Tube current is equal to the number of electrons flowing from the cathode to the anode per unit time • Exposure of the beam for a given kVp and filtration is proportional to the tube current
Exposure time • Exposure time is the duration of x-ray production • Quantity of x-rays is directly proportional to the product of the tube current and exposure time (mAs)
Beam filtration • Beam filtration modifies the quantity and quality of the x-ray beam by selectively removing low-energy photons in the spectrum • This reduces the photon number (quantity) and shifts the average energy to higher values, increasing the quality
Generator waveform • Generator waveform affects the quality of the emitted x-ray spectrum • For the same kVp, a single-phase generator provides a lower average potential difference than a three-phase or high-frequency generator • Both the quantity of x-rays produced and the quality of the x-ray spectrum are affected
Summary • X-ray quantity is approximately proportional to: • X-ray quality depends on kVp, generator waveform, and tube filtration • Exposure depends on both quality and quantity • Compensation for changes in kVp with radiographic techniques requires adjustments of mAs on the order of the fifth power of the kVp ratio
Power rating • Describes the energy per unit time that can be supplied (generator) or received (tube) • Power rating in kilowatts (kW) is the average power delivered by the maximum tube current for 100 kVp and 0.1-second exposure time:
Heat loading • The heat unit (HU) is used to express the energy deposition on and dissipation from the anode of an x-ray tube
Heat loading (cont.) • HU underestimates energy deposition for three-phase, high-frequency or constant potential generators • Multiplicative factor of 1.35 to 1.40 compensates for this difference • For fluoroscopy:
Exposure rating charts • Used to determine operational limits of the x-ray tube for single and multiple exposures and permissible heat load of the anode and the tube housing • Specific to a particular x-ray tube and must not be used for other tubes
Single-exposure rating chart • Provides information on allowed combinations of kVp, mA, and exposure time for a particular x-ray tube, focal spot size, anode rotation speed, and generator type (no accumulated heat on the anode) • Family of charts for specific focal spot size and anode rotation speed
Use of rating charts • Find the intersection of the requested kVp and exposure time • Determine the corresponding mA (interpolating between adjacent curves, if necessary). This is the maximum mA allowed by the tube focal spot • Compare the desired mA to the maximum mA allowed. If the desired mA is larger, the exposure is not allowed. • For mA versus time plots with various kVp curves, the rules are the same but with an exchange of kVp and mA labels
Anode heat input/cooling chart • Shows the remaining heat load of the anode versus time as the anode cools • Maximum anode heat load is the upper value on the y-axis of the chart • After a series of exposures, total heat load accumulated on the anode is calculated as the sum of the HU incident per exposure • If it is necessary to wait before reusing the tube in order to avoid anode damage, the cooling chart specifies how long to wait
Anode heat chart (cont.) • Same chart shows heat input curves that correspond to to continuous heat input resulting from fluoroscopy operation • Curves initially rise very fast but reach a plateau • Rate of heat energy input into anode equals rate of heat energy dissipation by radiative emission • Useful for determining amount of accumulated heat on anode after a given amount of fluoroscopy time
Housing cooling chart • Heat generated in the anode eventually transfers to the tube housing • Chart is used in much the same way as the anode cooling chart • Housing heat load typically exceeds that of the anode