X-Ray Production Flashcards
parts of x-ray machine
tubehead
collimator
positioning arm
control panel
circuitry
what is inside the xray tube
glass envelope
cathode
anode
glass envelope use
maintains vacuum so electrons can travel from cathode to anode
leaded glass to absorb photons not in desired direction
cathode use
filament = electron release
- made of tungsten
focusing cup = repels electrons at filament, focuses electrons at anode target
- molybdenum
anode use
target = produces photons and heat
- made of tungsten
- focal spot where electrons collide and create photons
heat-dissipating block = target embedded in metal
- copper
- thermal conduction which reduces overheating
step up and step down transformer
step up -
increases potential difference across xray tube to 60-70kV
step down -
decreases potential difference across filaments to 10V
what does electron volts (eV) measure
kinetic energy gained by electrons as they accelerate from cathode to anode
if 70kV = each electron has 70keV of kinetic energy reaching anode
in the xray tube, what metals attenuate the photons
copper and tungsten
penumbra effect
blurring of radiographic image due to focal spot not being a single point, but a small area
need a focal spot to reduce superimposition and creation of blurry image
this increases heat concentration however
so angle target instead
components of xray tubehead
xray tube
metal shielding [lead]
aluminium filtration
- removes lower energy xrays which do not contribute to image
oil
- disspitates heat
spacer cone
- fsd, set distance, indicates direction of beam
collimator
lead diaphragm at end of spacer cone
reduces pt dose
crops xray beam to match size
rectangular best
50x40mm
reduce surface area irradiation by 50%
increases collimation errors
how is heat and x-ray produces via electrons
heat -
outer shell electrons of tungsten atoms at target
xray -
inner shell electrons and nuclei of tungsten at target
order of heat dissipation
heat
->
tungsten target
->
copper block
->
oil in tubehead
->
air
why do xray tubes operate at 70kV
so bombarding electrons have sufficient energy to displace K shell electrons
continuous radiation
continuous range of xray photon energy
maximum photon energy matches peak voltage
bombarding electrons interacts with nucleus of target atom