An instantaneous photomultiplier gain calibration method for PET or gamma camera detectors using an LED network

Hongdi Li, Yaqiang Liu, Tao Xing, Yu Wang, Jorge Uribe, Hossain Baghaei, Shuping Xie, Soonseok Kim, Rocio Ramirez, Wai Hoi Wong

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

In current clinical positron emission tomography (PET) cameras, there are about 1000 photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) in the detector system. Even a less-complicated gamma camera has many dozens of PMTs. Image quality and resolution of a camera is dependent on the proper equalization of all the PMT gains. However, a PMT gain can change with many environmental factors, such as room temperature, patient load, short-term or long-term radiation exposure, and time. Hence, an instantaneous automated PMT gain calibration method is especially important for an ultrahigh-resolution PET camera. We have developed a new PMT gain auto-tuning method using a blue light-emitting diode (LED) network. Each LED shines directly into the center of a scintillation crystal block from the PMT side, and the light is collected by the surrounding PMTs. The effects of crystal optical transferring efficiency and PMT optical coupling efficiency have been considered. The calibration is done by changing the gains of these surrounding PMTs or their following amplifiers to have the same signal output. An LED has well known problems of large light-yield varieties and is very sensitive to temperature. To overcome these problems, the light outputs of two neighboring LEDs are aligned first by a shared PMT. Each LED flashes individually and is driven by a 250 KHz pulse generator. At such a high pulse rate, the data acquisition for the gain calibration can be finished within a very short time so the LED temperature effect can be ignored. The amount of LED light output is set as close as possible to the amount of scintillation light by programming the width or height of the pulses; therefore, the same system electronics can be used for both purposes. Our proposed high-resolution whole-body PET camera with 924 PMTs in a PMT-quadrant-sharing (PQS) design can be calibrated in 1 minutes or less.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numberM7-150
Pages (from-to)2447-2451
Number of pages5
JournalIEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record
Volume4
StatePublished - 2003
Event2003 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record - Nuclear Science Symposium, Medical Imaging Conference - Portland, OR, United States
Duration: Oct 19 2003Oct 25 2003

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Radiation
  • Nuclear and High Energy Physics
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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