Title :
A flexible geometry Compton camera for industrial gamma ray imaging
Author :
Royle, G.J. ; Speller, R.D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Med. Phys., Univ. Coll. London, UK
Abstract :
A design for a Compton scatter camera is proposed which is applicable to gamma ray imaging within limited access industrial sites. The camera consists of a number of single element detectors arranged in a small cluster. Coincidence circuitry enables the detectors to act as a scatter camera. Positioning the detector cluster at various locations within the site, and subsequent reconstruction of the recorded data, allows an image to be obtained. The camera design allows flexibility to cater for limited space or access simply by positioning the detectors in the optimum geometric arrangement within the space allowed. The quality of the image will be limited but imaging could still be achieved in regions which are otherwise inaccessible. Computer simulation algorithms have been written to optimise the various parameters involved, such as geometrical arrangement of the detector cluster and the positioning of the cluster within the site, and to estimate the performance of such a device. Both scintillator and semiconductor detectors have been studied. A prototype camera has been constructed which operates three small single element detectors in coincidence. It has been tested in a laboratory simulation of an industrial site. This consisted of a small room (2 m wide×1 m deep×2 m high) into which the only access points were two 6 cm diameter holes in a side wall. Simple images of Cs-137 sources have been produced. The work described has been done on behalf of BNFL for applications at their Sellafield reprocessing plant in the UK
Keywords :
detector circuits; gamma-ray detection; nuclear electronics; radiation monitoring; semiconductor counters; solid scintillation detectors; BNFL; Compton scatter camera; Cs-137 source imaging; Sellafield reprocessing plant; coincidence circuitry; computer simulation algorithms; design; detector cluster; flexible geometry Compton camera; industrial gamma ray imaging; limited access industrial sites; scintillator detectors; semiconductor detectors; single element detectors; Cameras; Circuits; Clustering algorithms; Computer simulation; Detectors; Geometry; Image reconstruction; Nuclear imaging; Prototypes; Scattering;
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium, 1996. Conference Record., 1996 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Anaheim, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3534-1
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.1996.591464