|
Claims  |
|
|
What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for rapidly achieving stabilized x-ray emissions from an x-ray
tube having an anode and cathode, said apparatus comprising:
voltage control means connected for initially establishing a voltage across
said anode and cathode which is substantially lower than an expected final
operating voltage such that only relatively low energy x-rays, if any, are
emitted during an initial tube preparation time period;
current control means connected for initially establishing a current during
said preparation time period between said anode and cathode which is
approximately equal to an expected final operating current and which is
never substantially in excess of the expected final operating current;
said voltage control means also including means for rapidly raising said
voltage across the anode and cathode to said expected final operating
voltage after said initial tube preparation period thereby permitting
rapid stabilization of the relatively small corresponding further required
increase in x-ray tube current which, in turn, provides the useful high
energy x-ray tube emissions.
2. Apparatus as in claim 1 including an x-ray tube power supply providing
anode and cathode voltage and current controlled in magnitude by
respectively corresponding analog signals and wherein:
said voltage control means and said current control means are initially
activated by at least one first discrete input signal representing the
beginning of said initial tube preparation period to provide, as
respectively corresponding outputs, said analog signals;
said voltage control means being further activated after said initial tube
preparation period by at least one second discrete signal to step its
output analog signal to a value corresponding to said expected final
operating voltage.
3. Apparatus as in claim 1 or 2 wherein said voltage control means and said
current control means are provided with separate digital control input
ports for receiving respectively corresponding time-referenced control
inputs thereat which define said initial tube preparation time period.
4. Apparatus as in claim 2 further comprising:
a time delay circuit connected to receive said first discrete input signal
and to provide said second discrete signal at a predetermined time period
thereafter.
5. Apparatus as in claim 2 or 4 including further comprising an on/off
power supply control circuit connected to receive said first discrete
input signal and to provide on/off control signals to said x-ray tube
power supply in response thereto.
6. Apparatus as in claim 2 or 4 further comprising a manual switch for
manually generating said first discrete input signal.
7. A source of x-ray flux which can be rapidly stabilized in response to a
turn-on command, said source comprising:
an x-ray tube having a cathode and an anode,
an electrical power supply connected to provide controlled levels of
electrical voltage and current respectively across and through said
cathode and anode, and
a control circuit connected to control said power supply so as to initially
establish first levels of voltage and current with respect to said cathode
and anode with said first level of controlled current being approximately
equal to a desired final second level of current and never substantially
in excess of the desired final second level of current and, in response to
said turn-on command, to thereafter establish second levels of stabilized
voltage and current with respect to said cathode and anode.
8. A source of x-ray flux as in claim 7 wherein said x-ray tube exhibits
substantially constant current versus voltage operating characteristics
above some first predetermined value of voltage and wherein said first
levels of voltage and current establish an operating point for said x-ray
tube near said first predetermined value of voltage and wherein said
second levels of voltage and current establish an operating point for said
x-ray tube near a second predetermined value of voltage where x-rays of a
desired usuable energy level are generated.
9. A source of x-ray flux which can be stabilized in response to a turn-on
command, said source comprising:
an x-ray tube having a cathode and an anode,
an electrical power supply connected to provide controlled levels of
electrical voltage and current respectively across and through said
cathode and anode,
a control circuit connected to control said power supply so as to initially
establish first levels of voltage and current with respect to said cathode
and anode and, in response to said turn-on command, to thereafter
establish second levels of voltage and current with respect to said
cathode and anode, and
material placed in the path of said x-ray flux to substantially absorb any
x-rays produced by the x-ray tube when provided with said first levels of
voltage and current.
10. A source of x-ray flux as in claim 9 wherein said control circuit
includes a time delay circuit connected to cause the establishment of said
second levels of voltage and current at a predetermined time delay after
said first levels of voltage and current have been applied to the x-ray
tube.
11. A source of x-ray flux as in claim 9 wherein said control circuit
includes separate control input ports for receiving respective input
signals which independently and respectively control the establishment of
said first and second levels of voltage and current.
12. Method for rapidly achieving stabilized x-ray emissions from an x-ray
tube having an anode and cathode, said method comprising the steps of:
initially establishing a voltage across said anode and cathode which is
substantially lower than an expected final operating voltage such that
only relatively low energy x-rays, if any, are emitted during an initial
tube preparation time period;
initially establishing a current during said preparation time period
between said anode and cathode which is approximately equal to an expected
final operating current and which is never substantially in excess of the
expected final operating current;
rapidly raising said voltage across the anode and cathode to said expected
final operating voltage after said initial tube preparation period thereby
permitting rapid stabilization of the relatively small corresponding
further required increase in x-ray tube current which, in turn, provides
the useful high energy x-ray tube emissions.
13. Method as in claim 12 wherein a controllable x-ray tube power supply is
provided to control the magnitude of cathode voltage and current by
respectively corresponding analog signals and further comprising:
initially controlling the voltage magnitude in response for at least one
first discrete input signal representing the beginning of said initial
tube preparation period to provide, as respectively corresponding outputs,
said analog signals; and
further controlling the voltage magnitude after said initial tube
preparation period in response to a least one second discrete signal so as
to step the corresponding output analog signal to a value corresponding to
said expected final operating voltage.
14. Method as in claim 12 or 13 wherein separate digital control inputs
receive respectively corresponding time-referenced control inputs thereat
which define said initial tube preparation time period.
15. Method as in claim 13 further comprising:
receiving said first discrete input signal and, after a predetermined time
dealy, providing said second discrete signal in response thereto.
16. Method as in claim 13 or 15 further comprising the generation of on/off
control signals to said x-ray tube power supply in response to said first
discrete input signal.
17. Method as in claim 13 or 11 wherein said first discrete input signal is
manually generated.
18. A method for stabilizing x-ray flux from an x-ray tube, said method
comprising the steps of:
initially establishing a relatively low voltage operating point for said
x-ray tube,
thereafter raising the x-ray tube operating point to its desired full
operating voltage level, and
absorbing in a material barrier substantially all x-rays emitted from said
x-ray tube while at said relatively low voltage operating point.
19. A method for stabilizing x-ray flux from an x-ray tube, said method
comprising the steps of:
initially establishing a relatively low voltage stabilized operating point
for said x-ray tube with a controlled current approximately equal to the
final desired full operating current level and never substantially in
excess of the final desired full operating current level, and
thereafter raising the x-ray tube stabilized operating point to its desired
full operating voltage and current levels. |
|
|
|
|
Claims  |
|
|
Description  |
|
|
This invention generally relates to method and apparatus for controlling
useful high energy x-ray tube emissions so as to more rapidly achieve
stabiized operation at such high energy output levels. When used in
medical apparatus, the invention helps minimize patient x-ray dosage and
may also permit an increased useful duty cycle for the overall medical
x-ray equipment in which this invention is used.
More particularly, this invention is presently intended for use in a
medical CT scanner using an x-ray tube. This invention materially improves
the turn on characteristics of the x-ray tube in such usages. Briefly
stated, the invention exploits the typical constant current
characteristics of an x-ray tube so as to speed thermal equilibrium (and
resultant x-ray emission). Briefly summarized, the x-ray tube is operated
during an initial preparation period so as to produce only low energy
x-rays (which are ordinarily absorbed anyway by the usual beam hardening
materials placed in the x-ray path) in spite of the fact that the tube is
operating at approximately its final expected operating current. Once this
condition has been reached, the tube voltage may be rapidly stepped to its
final value (thus greatly increasing the energy of output x-rays) while
the tube current (and hence output x-ray flux) may be also rapidly
stabilized at its final value since it only needs to be adjusted by
relatively small corresponding further required amount.
In modern CT scanner applications, the body tissues under examination often
require measurements over a dynamic range of approximately 10,000 to 1.
The required accuracy of such measurements made within this range is also
quite high and typical requirements are one part in many thousand.
Accordingly, for this particular application (and perhaps for others as
well) a relatively stable x-ray flux is required from an x-ray tube during
data measurements so that the useful information is not masked by
variations in the x-ray output. Typically, the x-ray output flux itself
must be maintained to within approximately 1% of a nominal value. Data
normalization techniques are then available for making the effective
stability equivalent to approximately 0.1-0.01%.
Using prior art method and apparatus for controlling x-ray tube emissions,
approximately one-half second may be typically required to stabilize the
x-ray flux at the required 1% of nominal value. High energy x-rays are
normally output during this stabilization. As CT scan cycles become
increasingly shortened (e.g. less than 5 seconds and perhaps as short as 1
or 2 seconds), this required stabilization time represents an increasingly
large proportion of the total x-ray dosage suffered by the patient.
Furthermore, since the x-ray tube is dissipating relatively large
quantities of energy during this stabilization period, the proportion of
total tube energy dissipation caused by this stabilization period also
increases as the scan time is decreased thus reducing the useful duty
cycle of the tube and, in some cases, limiting the number of scan cycles
which may be effected over a given time span. However, using this
invention, patient dosage is minimized, tube life may even be prolonged
and higher patient throughput of a CT scanner system may be achieved.
In typical prior art x-ray systems, x-ray tube emission is controlled by
monitoring the anode of cathode current and controlling filament
temperatures in response thereto. For example, a voltage proportional to
such tube current may be compared to a reference voltage and used to
control the filament voltage supply. However, since the x-ray tube output
is controlled by filament emission, and since the filament control loop
response rate is necessarily limited by the thermal time constant of a
relatively massive x-ray tube filament, stabilization delays of hundreds
of milliseconds or even several seconds are typical.
One prior art technique for improving the turn on response utilizes
filament preheating circuitry. Here, the filament temperature is caused to
idle at a temperature slightly below the level required for normal
emission and the tube is turned on by rapidly applying the required high
voltage. Such prior art techniques require a compromise since a high
preheat current will reduce filament life and since a low preheat current
requires longer stabilization time and, in addition, may literally cause
"stripping" of material from the filament during a turn on cycle thus
causing gradual degradation of the filament emission characteristics.
Another prior art modification of the latter procedure intended to extend
filament life is to step the filament loop from a relatively low preheat
condition to a relatively high preheat condition just before turning on
the x-ray tube high voltage. However, since there is no actual tube
current during this initial increase in the filament preheat current, the
filament regulator is presented with control inputs that tend to drive the
filament to the absolute maximum temperature and, in fact, may actually
burn the filament out if not properly limited. Using this technique, the
time delay in applying the high voltage is also critical. Too long delay
will result in considerable overshoot of emission while too little delay
results in a filament temperature which only approaches equilibrium
exponentially in an overdamped fashion. At best, optimum timing must be
individually adjusted for each x-ray tube.
Yet another prior art modification of the just mentioned technique is to
provide a memory (preferably digital) to store the last used filament
voltage or current parameters and to use these values as the starting
point for setting the filament control loop at the initiation of the next
scan cycle. It should be appreciated, that this technique can become
fairly complex in practical implementation.
Now, however, with the present invention, it has been discovered that a
relatively simple method and apparatus may be provided to control x-ray
tube emissions more rapidly and accurately than heretofore was possible.
This discovery exploits the approximately constant current (versus
voltage) characteristics of x-ray tubes. The discovery also exploits the
fact that relatively "soft" low energy x-rays do not penetrate even thin
aluminum filters (or other appropriate material barriers) normally placed
in the path of x-rays. In accordance with this invention, the x-ray tube
is initially operated during a pre-turn on period at a point where
approximately full tube current is achieved but where only relatively low
tube voltage is used. Thus the output comprises only "soft" x-rays which
are normally harmless since they are absorbed by the usual aluminum
"hardening" filters. Accordingly, the time required to reach this initial
operating point on the x-ray tube is virtually immaterial. Thereafter, the
tube may be very rapidly stabilized with high energy output x-rays by
stepping the tube voltage up to a higher level. The required further minor
adjustment and stabilization of the tube current can be rapidly effected
since only minor adjustments are required. For example, rather than the
typical requirement of one-half second or so to normalize high energy
output x-rays with prior art approaches, this invention makes it possible
to stabilize the high energy output x-rays in only approximately one-tenth
second or less thus greatly reducing patient dosage and providing other
advantages as will be discussed in more detail below.
These and other objects and advantages of this invention will be more
completely understood and appreciated by reading the following detailed
description of the presently preferred exemplary embodiment of the
invention together with the accompanying drawings, of which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a typical prior art x-ray tube filament
control loop;
FIG. 2 is a graph showing a typical sequence of voltages and currents in
prior art x-ray tube turn on techniques;
FIG. 3 is a graph showing the approximately constant current (versus
voltage) characteristics of an x-ray tube for various filament
temperatures;
FIG. 4 is a graph showing the sequence of x-ray tube voltage and currents
employed in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of this invention;
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of an exemplary circuit which may be used for
either manually or automatically (under computer control) generating
required analog voltage control signals for a suitable x-ray tube power
supply from one or more discrete input signals; and
FIG. 6 is a graph of digital control signals provided to the automatic
computer control operation of the circuitry shown in FIG. 5.
As shown in FIG. 1, most prior art x-ray systems control x-ray tube
emission by monitoring the anode or cathode current I.sub.t and
controlling the tube filament temperature in response thereto. A measured
voltage E.sub.r sensed across resistor 10 is compared to a reference
voltage E.sub.ref and the resultant control signal (e.g. output from
amplifier 12) is used to control a regulated filament supply circuit 14.
The filament supply 14 is activated by a conventional turn on command at
16 as should be apparent.
If the output of amplifier 12 is negative, the filament regulator 14
increases the filament temperature to increase the x-ray tube emission
(and anode current). On the other hand, the output of amplifier 12 is
positive, the filament regulator reduces the filament voltage (and
current) thus decreasing x-ray emissions. Since the x-ray tube emission is
controlled by controlling the filament emission, the response rate is
necessarily limited by the thermal time constant of the x-ray tube
filament. Typically, such filaments are rather massive in size and have
considerable thermal time constants thus causing turn on stabilization
delays of hundreds of milliseconds or several seconds.
As already briefly discussed above, one prior art technique for improving
upon the situation is to provide a filament preheat. As also discussed
above, one type of prior art filament preheat technique is to initially
step the filament to a higher preheat just before applying high voltage to
the x-ray tube. Typically, this initial higher preheat filament current is
controlled by prior art control loops such as shown in FIG. 1. It should
be apparent from FIG. 1, since there is no tube current flowing without
applied high voltage, the output of amplifier 12 will be at a maximum thus
driving filament regulator 14 to its maximum output and the filament
itself to a maximum temperature. Appropriate limiting techniques must be
employed to keep the filament from burning out.
The resulting situation is depicted in FIG. 2. If the delay period shown in
FIG. 2 is chosen optimally for the particular tube then in use, the
filament emission may be stabilized in a relatively short time after
application of the high voltage. However, as briefly discussed above, too
long a time delay (for the particular tube characteristics then used in
the equipment) will result in overshooting the desired x-ray emission
level and too little delay will result in a filament temperature which
only approaches equilibrium exponentially in an overdamped fashion. In
short, the timing is critical and must be individually adjusted for each
tube.
In a high speed x-ray CT scanner, the total scan time may be in the
neighborhood of 1-5 seconds or less. In such an environment, the turn on
delay experienced with such prior art techniques can have a substantial
adverse impact. For example, unless the x-ray tube has reached a
stabilized emission before data measurements are actually taken, the x-ray
detectors will provide incorrect data and the resulting reconstructed
tomographic image of body tissues will be incorrect. (Use of a data
normalizing (reference) detector can help alleviate this adverse effect.)
Furthermore, in a high speed CT scanner, the x-ray tube is typically of
the rotating anode variety and can thus only store a limited quantity of
"heat units" (watt/seconds, joules, btu's, etc.) before destructive
heating occurs. Cooling is always marginal since it primarily depends upon
radiation from the rotating anode. Typically, real time measurement or
calculation of the instantaneous quantity of stored "heat units" must be
accomplished so as to insure an adequate safety margin such as by
disabling the entire CT scanner until such time as the stored "heat units"
are back within the required safety margins. Clearly, prior art
stabilization techniques which cause substantial heating during
stabilization undesirably contribute to this heating problem.
The current versus voltage characteristics for a typical x-ray tube used in
a CT scanner are shown in FIG. 3. It should be noted that, in the region
above approximately 30 kv, the incremental change of current versus
incremental changes of voltage is relatively small. Accordingly, if the
x-ray tube is initially stabilized at an operating point A near the knee
of these constant current curves, it may thereafter be rapidly stabilized
at another operating point B since only relatively small current changes
are required. This type of turn on operation is quite usable in CT
scanners or other medical devices even if significant time is required to
achieve operating point A since the "soft" 30 kv x-rays emitted at this
operating point are normally lost or absorbed in the usual 1/8 inch
aluminum or other metal shields normally placed in the path of x-rays. For
example, such shields are normally placed in CT scanners so as to "harden"
the x-ray tube output by removing any "soft" components of the x-ray
emissions. These emissions would only produce unnecessary patient dosage
anyway because they would never completely traverse the patient's tissue
and reach the x-ray detectors disposed on the opposite side of such
tissue.
Operation of an x-ray tube in accordance with the exemplary embodiment of
this invention is depicted in FIG. 4. Here, an initial tube preparation
time period of 0-1,000 milliseconds is provided for stabilizing the tube
operation at point A (95 milliamperes, 30 kv, constant filament
temperature). During this time period, the total tube energy dissipation
is approximately 18 kilowatt seconds. This is approximately only 13% of
the normal energy dissipated in a 5 second scan with the tube operating at
its full operating voltage of 140 kilovolts at 100 milliamperes. Stated
differently, approximately 80 kilowatt seconds would be dissipated in the
tube before equilibrium if one tries to simultaneously apply full
operating voltage and current to the tube. Accordingly, as compared to
this situation, the invention has saved approximately 62 kilowatt seconds
of energy dissipation.
At the end of this initial tube preparation time period (e.g. 1-2 seconds),
the tube may be dissipating on the order of 28,500 watts since less than
1% of the applied energy is converted to x-rays at this low 30 kv anode
voltage. Thereafter when tube turn on is desired, the voltage is stepped
as rapidly as possible to its full value (140-150 kv). Typically available
voltage regulator systems can achieve voltage swings at rates on the order
of 10.sup.6 volts per second which is much more rapid than the control
rate which may be achieved in a filament control loop. As the voltage is
stepped from approximately 30 kv to 140 kv, the tube operating point is
similarly changed from point A to point B. (The constantly maintained
filament temperature will determined which of the several constant current
curves in FIG. 3 is involved.) Since the tube current only has to shift
from 95 milliamperes to approximately 100 milliamperes (a change of only
5%), even a tube with a one-half second filament thermal time constant can
make the adjustment to within .+-.1% of the total output flux in a fairly
short time. Typically, the tube can reach its equilibrium emission in
approximately one-tenth to one-fourth of the time required for an
unmodified prior art technique.
As already discussed, this improvement reduces unnecessary patient dosage
and also permits a higher patient throughput (e.g. 10-20% increase or
more) due to the reduced unnecessary energy dissipation required of the
tube for each cycle of operation in a CT scanner. Tube life may also be
prolonged over some prior art techniques since "stripping" of the filament
is avoided with this invention.
An exemplary embodiment of circuitry for achieving this improved control of
x-ray tube emissions is shown in FIG. 5. As shown in FIG. 5, such control
may be achieved either manually through operation of switch 20 or under
automatic computer control through computer provided digital control
signals C, C and V, V.
The manual operation of the circuitry will first be described. As switch 20
is closed, a positive control voltage is applied to the control inputs C,
A of digital SPDP switches 22 and 24 as well as to the positive input of
comparator 26. This input causes the output of comparator 26 to saturate
in the positive direction thus turning "on" transistor 28 and supplying an
"on" power supply control signal on line 30. A red colored LED 32 is also
switched on by this action to signify the activation of the power supply.
In the exemplary embodiment a Delta ray model M150-100CX x-ray power
supply is utilized and the terminal designations shown at the right of
FIG. 5 are appropriate for that particular power supply. In general, any
x-ray tube power supply may be used which provides anode and cathode
voltages and currents controlled in magnitude by respectively
corresponding analog signals. This particular power supply also requires
an on/off control signal as applied on line 30.
The positive control signal to electronic switch 24 connects a positive
input to amplifier 34 via the adjustable potentiometer 36. The output of
amplifier 34 on line 38 is thus an analog current control corresponding to
the final desired x-ray tube current.
At the same time, the positive control signal via manual switch 20 applied
to the electronic switch 22 connects a positive voltage to an adjustable
RC timing network comprising resistors 40, 42 and 44 and capacitor 46.
When the output of this RC timing network exceeds the reference voltage
also input to comparator 48, its output will saturate in a positive
direction thus providing a positive control signal to the electronic
switch 50. As should be appreciated, in this manual control mode, the RC
timing network defines the relative timing of control signals applied to
switches 24 and 50 and thus defines the initial tube preparation time
period.
In its normal condition, (i.e. no positive control signal applied),
electronic switch 50 connects a very small, substantially constant,
positive input voltage to amplifier 52 via a connection to the voltage
drop across diode 54 which, in turn, is forward biased due to the analog
control current appearing on line 38. Thus, during the initial tube
preparation period, a relatively small analog voltage control appears on
line 56 corresponding to approximately 25-30 kv of x-ray tube operating
voltage. However, after the initial tube preparation period has ended, a
positive control signal applied to electronic switch 50 will cause the
input to amplifier 52 to be increased significantly via a pre-adjustable
positive supply voltage applied through adjustable potentiometer 58. At
this time, the analog voltage control signal on line 56 is stepped to
correspond to the full x-ray tube operating voltage (140-150 kv).
Termination of the x-ray tube operating cycle may then be manually effected
by opening switch 20. This operation will cause the output of electronic
switches 22 and 24 to be grounded and, at the same time, will cause the
output of comparator 26 to saturate in a negative direction thus turning
on transistor 60 and causing the green LED 62 to light while turning "off"
the power supply control signal.
Automatic computer control operation may be effected by supplying digital
current and voltage control signals C, C and V, V respectively as shown in
FIG. 6. Here, as digital current control signal C is initially applied,
the signal is transmitted through an optical coupler 64 to provide a
positive control signal to electronic switch 24 and to comparator 26.
Thereafter, after a suitable initial tube preparation time period, a
digital voltage control signal V, V is supplied via optical coupler 66 to
provide a positive control input to digital switch 50. Thereafter,
operation of the digital switches, amplifiers and comparators to generate
power supply, analog current and analog voltage control signals on lines
30, 38 and 56 is as already discussed for manual operation. The whole CT
scanner measurement cycle may then be terminated by cessation of the
digital signals C and V as shown in FIG. 6.
As indicated in FIG. 5, the electronic switches 22, 24 and 50 may be
realized as a single commercially available integrated circuit CD4053.
Similarly, the comparators and amplifiers 48, 26, 34 and 52 may be
realized as a single commercially available integrated circuit LM324. The
optical couplers 64 and 66 may, for example, be the commercially available
type H11A550.
While only one specific exemplary embodiment has been described in detail,
those skilled in the art will recognize that many variations and
modifications of this exemplary embodiment are possible without departing
from the novel and advantageous features of this invention. Accordingly,
all such variations and modifications are intended to be included within
the scope of this invention as defined in the appended claims.
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
|
Description  |
|