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X Ray Production

X-ray production involves projectile electrons interacting with target atoms. This results in three effects: heat production, characteristic x-rays, and bremsstrahlung x-rays. Bremsstrahlung x-rays are produced when projectile electrons are slowed by the electric field of target nuclei. Characteristic x-rays are emitted when an outer-shell electron fills an inner-shell void of a target atom. The x-ray emission spectrum shows the energy distribution of emitted x-rays. It can be continuous for bremsstrahlung x-rays or discrete for characteristic x-rays. Several factors affect the shape and properties of the emission spectrum, including tube current, voltage, filtration, target material,

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
249 views

X Ray Production

X-ray production involves projectile electrons interacting with target atoms. This results in three effects: heat production, characteristic x-rays, and bremsstrahlung x-rays. Bremsstrahlung x-rays are produced when projectile electrons are slowed by the electric field of target nuclei. Characteristic x-rays are emitted when an outer-shell electron fills an inner-shell void of a target atom. The x-ray emission spectrum shows the energy distribution of emitted x-rays. It can be continuous for bremsstrahlung x-rays or discrete for characteristic x-rays. Several factors affect the shape and properties of the emission spectrum, including tube current, voltage, filtration, target material,

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Rozlyn Dela Cruz
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X-RAY PRODUCTION

ELECRON TARGET INTERACTION

Kinetic Energy
 The energy of motion Bremsstrahlung Radiation
 Symbol: KE  It is produced when a projectile electron is
 Unit: J slowed by the electric field of a target
 Formula: KE = ½mv2 atom nucleus
 An interaction with the nuclear field of a
1 keV = 1.6 x 10-16 J target atom
 “slowed down radiation”
Projectile Electron
 It results from braking of projectile
 Electrons travelling from cathode to anode
electrons by the nucleus
 It interacts with the orbital electrons or
 Energy: all or none
nuclear field of target atoms
 Three Effects: High-Energy Bremsstrahlung X-ray
o The production of heat
 It results when the projectile electrons
o The formation of characteristics x- loses all its KE & simply drifts away from
rays the nucleus
o The formation of bremsstrahlung
x-rays Low-Energy Bremsstrahlung X-ray
 It results when the projectile electrons are
Anode Heat barely influenced by the nucleus
 Reasons: constant excitation & return of
outer-shell electrons In the diagnostic range, most x-rays are
 Increases directly with increasing x-ray bremsstrahlung x-rays!
tube current & kVp
X-RAY EMISSION SPECTRUM
Efficiency of X-ray Production
 It is independent of the tube current Spectrum
 It increases with increasing kVp  Graphic representation of the range over
which a quantity extends
Characteristic Radiation
 It is emitted when an outer-shell electron Discrete Spectrum
fills an inner-shell void  It contains only specific values
 An interaction with the inner-shell of a
target atom Continuous Spectrum
 Energy: very specific  It contains all possible values

Only the K-characteristic x-rays of tungsten are X-ray Emission Spectrum


useful for imaging!  It can be graphed as the number of x-rays
for each increment of energy in keV
K X-rays
 X-rays resulting from electron transition to Characteristic X-ray Spectrum
the K shell  A plot of the frequency with which
characteristic x-rays are emitted as a
function of energy
L X-rays
 X-rays resulting from electron transition to Characteristic x-rays have precisely fixed
the L shell (discrete) energies and form a discrete emission
spectrum!
This type of x-radiation is called characteristic
because it is characteristic of the target element!
STEWART C. BUSHONG SUMMARIZED BY: MEYNARD Y. CASTRO
X-RAY PRODUCTION

Bremsstrahlung X-ray Spectrum


 It extends from zero to maximum Effect of mA and mAs
projectile electron energy  A change in mA or mAs results in a
 Greatest Number of X-rays Emitted: 1/3 of proportional change in the amplitude of
the maximum energy the x-ray emission spectrum at all energies
 Shape: the same for all x-ray imaging
system Four Principal Factors Influencing The Shape of
 Maximum Energy (keV): equal to kVp X-ray Emission Spectrum
operation  Low-energy electrons interact to produce
 Number of X-rays: decreases rapidly at low energy x-rays
very low energies  Successive interactions of electrons result
in the production of x-rays with lower
Bremsstrahlung x-rays have a range of energies energy
& form a continuous emission spectrum!  Low-energy x-ray are most likely to be
absorbed by the target material
 Added filtration preferentially removes
low-energy x-rays from the useful beam
Maximum x-ray energy is associated with the
minimum x-ray wavelength (λmin) Effect of kVp
 A change in kVp affects both the
FACTORS AFFECTING THE X-RAY amplitude & the position of the x-ray
EMISSION SPECTRUM emission spectrum
 A change in kVp has no effect on the
Integration position of the discrete x-ray emission
 A process that determines the total number spectrum
of x-rays emitted
 Adding the number of x-ray emitted at Rule of Thumb
each energy over the entire spectrum  It states a 15% increase in kVp is
equivalent to doubling the mAs
Effective Energy/Quality of X-ray Beam o Purpose: to obtain a given OD on
 Higher: the farther to the right of a the radiograph
spectrum o It does not double the x-ray
intensity
Intensity/Quantity of X-ray Beam  40% increase in kVp: doubling the output
 Higher: the larger the area under the curve intensity (not necessary)

In diagnostic range, a 15% increase in kVp is


FACTORS THAT AFFECT THE SIZE & equivalent to doubling the mAs!
RELATIVE POSITION OF X-RAY
EMISSION SPECTRA Added Filtration
Factors Effect  It reduces x-ray beam intensity while
Tube Current Amplitude of spectrum increasing average energy
Tube Voltage Amplitude & position  It absorbs low-energy x-rays
Added Filtration Amplitude, most effective at  Hardening of the x-ray beam
low energy  Characteristic Spectrum: not affected
Target Material Amplitude of spectrum &
position of line spectrum Effect of Added Filtration
Voltage Waveform Amplitude, most effective at
high energy

STEWART C. BUSHONG SUMMARIZED BY: MEYNARD Y. CASTRO


X-RAY PRODUCTION

 It results in an increase in the average


energy of the x-ray beam with an
accompanying reduction in x-ray quantity

Effect of Target Material


 Increasing target atomic number enhances
the efficiency of x-ray production & the
energy of characteristic & bremsstrahlung
x-rays
 Discrete Emission Spectrum: shifts to the
right with an increase in target Z
 Continuous Emission Spectrum: increases
slightly in amplitude (high-energy side)
with an increase in target Z

Voltage Waveforms
 Half-wave Rectification
 Full-wave Rectification
 Three-phase/six-pulse
 Three-phase/twelve-pulse
 High Frequency

Effect of Voltage Waveform


 As the voltage across the x-ray tube
increases from zero to its peak value, x-ray
intensity & energy increase slowly at first
& then rapidly as peak voltage is obtained

Because of reduced ripple, operation with three-


phase power or high frequency is equivalent to
an approximate 12% increase in kVp or almost a
doubling of mAs over single-phase power!

CHANGES IN X-RAY BEAM QUALITY &


QUANTITY PRODUCED BY FACTORS
THAT INFLUENCE THE EMISSION
SPECTRUM
An increase in Result in
An increase in quantity.
Current (mAs)
No change in quality
An increase in quantity
Voltage (kVp)
& quality
A decrease in quantity.
Added Filtration
An increase in quality
Target Atomic Number An increase in quality
(Z) & quantity
A decrease in quantity
Voltage Ripple
& quality

STEWART C. BUSHONG SUMMARIZED BY: MEYNARD Y. CASTRO

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