Title :
A programmable high-resolution ultra-fast delay generator
Author :
Liu, Yaqiang ; Li, Hongdi ; Wang, Yu ; Xing, Tao ; Baghaei, Hossain ; Uribe, Jorge ; Farrell, Rocio ; Wong, Wai-Hoi
Author_Institution :
M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Univ. of Texas, Houston, TX, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents a high-resolution, low-dead-time digital delay method in which the performance is independent of the total delay time. We have implemented a low-dead-time (50 ns) and high-resolution (±0.9 ns) delay generator with delay times up to hundreds of milliseconds. We propose high-resolution whole-body positron emission tomograghy (PET) with a 12-module photomultiplier tube-quadrant- sharing (PQS) detector design. This high-resolution delay unit is an important part of the new PET electronics in which a high-yield pileup event recovery (HYPER) method is used. Using the HYPER method, the energy/position signals are generated or digitized upon the arrival of the next event (arriving at a random time after the present event). If the present event is piled up by the next event, the energy/position signals are no longer synchronized with the leading edge of the triggering signal. To detect a coincidence event by using the HYPER method, the original trigger signal must be delayed by a fixed time (1.5 μs for a PET using a bismuth germinate crystal) and a new synchronization process must also be set up between the delayed trigger and the energy/position signals before being passed to the coincidence detection electronics. Each HYPER processor requires one delay generator; there are 48 delay units inside the whole PET system. This high-resolution delay generator also can be used in other PET systems in which a delay is needed to synchronize the fast timing trigger to the slower integration or detection address outputs; this low timing jitter delay can also be applied to automatic test equipment and communications.
Keywords :
biomedical electronics; positron emission tomography; synchronisation; HYPER processor; coincidence detection electronics; delayed trigger; high-resolution whole-body positron emission tomography; high-yield pileup event recovery; low-dead-time digital delay method; programmable high-resolution ultra-fast delay generator; synchronization process; triggering signal; Delay effects; Detectors; Event detection; Photomultipliers; Positron emission tomography; Radioactive decay; Signal generators; Signal processing; Timing jitter; Whole-body PET;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2003.817412