posted on 2023-11-02, 12:00authored byYirong Su, Peng Ran, Juan Hui, Yang “Michael” Yang
Conventional flat panel X-ray imaging (FPXI) employs
a single scintillator
for X-ray conversion, which lacks energy spectrum information. The
recent innovation of employing multilayer scintillators offers a route
for multispectral X-ray imaging. However, the principles guiding optimal
multilayer scintillator configuration selection and quantitative analysis
models remain largely unexplored. Here, we propose to adopt the K-edge
absorption coefficient as a key parameter for selecting tandem scintillator
combinations and to utilize the coefficient matrix to calculate the
absorption efficiency spectrum of the sample. Through a dual scintillator
example comprising C4H12NMnCl3 and
Cs3Cu2I5, we establish a streamlined
quantitative framework for deducing X-ray spectra from scintillation
spectra, with an average relative error of 6.28% between the calculated
and measured sample absorption spectrum. This insight forms the foundation
for our quantitative method to distinguish the material densities.
Leveraging this tandem scintillator configuration, in conjunction
with our analytical tools, we successfully demonstrate the inherent
merits of dual-energy X-ray imaging for discerning materials with
varied densities and thicknesses.