Title: Radiation%20Interactions
1Radiation Interactions
2Interactions with Matter
- Charged particles lose energy as they interact
with the orbital electrons in matter by
excitation and ionization, and/or radiative
losses. - Excitation occurs when the incident particle
bumps an electron to a higher orbital in the
absorbing medium. - Ionization occurs when the transferred energy
exceeds the binding energy of the electron and it
is ejected. The ejected electron may then also
produce further ionizations.
3Specific Ionization
- The number of ion pairs produced per unit path
length is the specific ionization. - Alpha particles can produce as many as 7,000
IP/mm. Electrons produce 50-100 IP/cm in air. - LET is the product of the specific ionization and
the average energy deposited per IP IP/cm x
eV/IP. - About 70 of electron energy loss leads to
non-ionizing excitation.
4Charged Particle Tracks
- e- follow tortuous paths through matter as the
result of multiple Coulombic scattering processes
- An a2, due to its higher mass follows a more
linear trajectory - Path length actual distance the particle
travels in matter - Range effective linear penetration depth of the
particle in matter - Range path length
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p.34.
5Bremsstrahlung
- Deceleration of an e- around a nucleus causes it
to emit Electromagnetic radiation or
bremsstrahlung (G.) breaking radiation - Probability of bremsstrahlung emission ? Z2 Ratio
of e- energy loss due to bremsstrahlung vs.
excitation and ionization KEMeVZ/820 - Thus, for an 100 keV e- and tungsten (Z74) 1
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p.35.
6Electromagnetic Radiation Interactions
- Raleigh Scattering Photon is scattered with no
energy loss. Uncommon at diagnostic energies. - Compton ScatteringPhoton strikes outer electron
and ejects it, resulting in energy loss of photon
and change of direction. - Photoelectric Effect Photon is totally absorbed
by K or L shell electron which is ejected. - Pair Production High energy photon interaction.
7Rayleigh Scattering
- Excitation of the total complement of atomic
electrons occurs as a result of interaction with
the incident photon - No ionization takes place
- No loss of E
- lt5 of interactions at diagnostic energies.
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 37.
8Compton Scattering
- Dominant interaction of x-rays with soft tissue
in the diagnostic range and beyond (approx. 30
keV - 30MeV) - Occurs between the photon and a free e- (outer
shell e- considered free when Eg gtgt binding
energy, Eb of the e- ) - Encounter results in ionization of the atom and
probabilistic distribution of the incident photon
E to that of the scattered photon and the ejected
e- - A probabilistic distribution determines the angle
of deflection
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 38.
9Compton Scattering
- Compton interaction probability is dependent on
the total no. of e- in the absorber vol. (e-/cm3
e-/gm density) - With the exception of 1H, e-/gm is fairly
constant for organic materials (Z/A ? 0.5), thus
the probability of Compton interaction
proportional to material density (?) - Conservation of energy and momentum yield the
following equations - Eo Esc Ee-
- , where
mec2 511 keV
10Compton Scattering
- As incident E0 ? both photon and e- scattered in
more forward direction - At a given ? fraction of E transferred to the
scattered photon decreases with ? E0 - For high energy photons most of the energy is
transferred to the electron - At diagnostic energies most energy to the
scattered photon - Max E to e- at ? of 180o max E scattered photon
is 511 keV at ? of 90o
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 39.
11Photoelectric Effect
- All E transferred to e- (ejected photoelectron)
as kinetic energy (Ee) less the binding energy
Ee E0 Eb - Empty shell immediately filled with e- from
outer orbitals resulting in the emission of
characteristic x-rays (E? differences in Eb of
orbitals), for example, Iodine EK 34 keV, EL
5 keV, EM 0.6 keV
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 41.
12Photoelectric Effect
- Eb ? Z2
- Photoe- and cation characteristic x-rays and/or
Auger e- - Probability of photoe- absorption ? Z3/E3 (Z
atomic no.)
- Explains why contrast ? as higher energy x-rays
are used in the imaging process - Due to the absorption of the incident x-ray
without scatter, maximum subject contrast arises
with a photoe- effect interaction - Increased probability of photoe- absorption just
above the Eb of the inner shells cause
discontinuities in the attenuation profiles
(e.g., K-edge)
13Photoelectric Effect
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 1st ed., p. 26.
14Photoelectric Effect
- Edges become significant factors for higher Z
materials as the Eb are in the diagnostic energy
range - Contrast agents barium (Ba, Z56) and iodine
(I, Z53) - Rare earth materials used for intensifying
screens lanthanum (La, Z57) and gadolinium
(Gd, Z64) - Computed radiography (CR) and digital radiography
(DR) acquisition europium (Eu, Z63) and cesium
(Cs, Z55) - Increased absorption probabilities improve
subject contrast and quantum detective efficiency
- At photon E ltlt 50 keV, the photoelectric effect
plays an important role in imaging soft tissue,
amplifying small differences in tissues of
slightly different Z, thus improving subject
contrast (e.g., in mammography)
15Pair Production
- Conversion of mass to E occurs upon the
interaction of a high E photon (gt 1.02 MeV rest
mass of e- 511 keV) in the vicinity of a heavy
nucleus - Creates a negatron (ß-) - positron (ß) pair
- The ß annihilates with an e- to create two 511
keV photons separated at an ? of 180o
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 44.
16Radiation Interactions
WHICH ISHIGH kVp CHEST RADIOGRAPH AND WHICH IS
LOW kVp CHEST RADIOGRAPH ?
A
B
17Compton vs Photoelectric
WHICH ISLOW kVp BONE RADIOGRAPHAND WHICH
ISHIGH kVp BONE RADIOGRAPH ?
A
B
18Linear Attenuation Coef
- Cross section is a measure of the probability
(apparent area) of interaction ?(E) measured
in barns (10-24 cm2) - Interaction probability can also be expressed in
terms of the thickness of the material linear
attenuation coefficient ?(E) cm-1 Z e-
/atom Navg atoms/mole 1/A moles/gm ?
gm/cm3 ?(E) cm2/e- - ?(E) ? as E ?, e.g., for soft tissue
- ?(30 keV) 0.35 cm-1 and ?(100 keV) 0.16 cm-1
- ?(E) fractional number of photons removed
(attenuated) from the beam by absorption or
scattering - Multiply by 100 to get removed from the beam/cm
19Attenuation Coefficient
- An exponential relationship between the incident
radiation intensity (I0) and the transmitted
intensity (I) with respect to thickness - I(E) I0(E) e-?(E)x
- ?total(E) ?PE(E) ?CS(E) ?RS(E) ?PP(E)
- At low x-ray E ?PE(E) dominates and ?(E) ? Z3/E3
- At high x-ray E ?CS(E) dominates and ?(E) ? ?
- Only at very-high E (gt 1MeV) does ?PP(E)
contribute
- The value of ?(E) is dependent on the phase
state - ?water vapor ltlt ?ice lt ?water
20Attenuation Coefficient
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 46.
21Mass Attenuation Coef
- Mass attenuation coefficient ?m(E) cm2/g
normalization for ? ?m(E) ?(E)/?Independent of
phase state (?) and represents the fractional
number of photons attenuated per gram of material
- I(E) I0(E) e-?m(E)?x
- Represent thickness as g/cm2 - the effective
thickness of 1 cm2 of material weighing a
specified amount (?x)
22Half Value Layer
- Thickness of material required to reduce the
intensity of the incident beam by ½ - ½ e-?(E)HVL or HVL 0.693/?(E)
- Units of HVL expressed in mm Al for a Dx x-ray
beam - For a monoenergetic incident photon beam (i.e.,
that from a synchrotron), the HVL is easily
calculated - Remember for any function where dN/dx ? N which
upon integrating provides an exponential function
(e.g., I(E) I0(E) ekw ), the doubling (or
halving) dimension w is given by 69.3/k (e.g.,
3.5 CD doubles in 20 yr) - For each HVL, I ? by ½ 5 HVL ? I/I0 100/32
3.1
23Mean Free Path
- Mean free path (avg. path length of x-ray) 1/?
HVL/0.693 - Beam hardening
- The Bremsstrahlung process produces a wide
spectrum of energies, resulting in a
polyenergetic (polychromatic) x-ray beam - As lower E photons have a greater attenuation
coefficient, they are preferentially removed from
the beam - Thus the mean energy of the resulting beam is
shifted to higher E
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 1st ed., p. 281.
24Effective Energy
- The effective (avg.) E of an x-ray beam is ? to ½
the peak value (kVp) and gives rise to an ?eff,
the ?(E) that would be measured if the x-ray beam
were monoenergetic at the effective E - Homogeneity coefficient 1st HVL/2nd HVL
- A summary description of the x-ray beam
polychromaticity - HVL1 lt HVL2 lt HVLn so the homogeneity
coefficient lt 1
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 43.
c.f. Bushberg, et al. The Essential Physics of
Medical Imaging, 2nd ed., p. 45.
25Shielding
- I BI0 e-?x
- I is the Intensity in shielded area
- I0 is the unattenuated intensity
- B is the buildup factor
- ? is the attenuation coefficient
- X is the shield thickness
26Shielding
- The buildup factor is the ratio of scattered
photons that scatter back into the beam. - Since the photoelectric effect dominates at
diagnostic x-ray energies, the buildup factor is
1.0. - Therefore lead aprons work well in diagnostic
x-ray, but not in Nuclear Medicine (140 keV
gammas) - Buildup must be considered for PET.