Xray Tube Design Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the basic function of the x-ray tube?

A

Produces electrons, harnessed from electricity, which can be used to create photons

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2
Q

Name the 5 basic elements of the x-ray tube and a basic function

A
  1. Pyrex glass envelope - Gas free enclosure
  2. Tungsten filament - where electrons are generated
  3. Molybdenum anode - where electrons strike
  4. Photon - x-ray beam
  5. Beryllium window - exit for x-ray beam
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3
Q

Describe power to the x-ray tube

A

A step up transformer is used to increase 240 volts from wall
Thousands of volts are required

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4
Q

Describe Alternating current in relation to the x-ray tube

A

X-ray tube requires direct current
Energy needs to flow from cathode to anode
When wave inverts, x-ray production stops - why direct current is needed

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5
Q

Describe rectification

A

Process that removes negative portion of the wave, making it positive
There is still a ripple effect

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6
Q

Describe mAs

A

Number of photons or x-rays in the beam

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7
Q

Describe kVp

A

The power that the photons are going to have

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8
Q

Describe the 2 parts of the exposure button

A
  1. top half - creates space charge
  2. bottom half - allows electrons to be accelerated across a potential difference, electrons strike focal track and x-rays are produced
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9
Q

Describe the structure of the anode

A

Disk Shaped, mounted on a spindle
Focal track inlaid to molybdenum
Rhenium combined with tungsten for alloy
Back filled with graphite - makes it lighter

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10
Q

Describe anode rotation

A

Rotating anode spreads heat over wider area
Induction motor used with ball bearings
Stator copper windings allow induced current

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11
Q

Describe the anode heel effect

A

Limitations of the machine can be used
Radiation protection - less intensity at anode side, put patients head here
Image quality - can create clearer image by positioning thicker parts near more intense beam

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12
Q

What is the line focus principle?

A

Describes relationship between actual and effective focal spots

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13
Q

What are actual and effective focal spots

A

Actual - area on anode struck by electrons
Effective - same area but viewed below x-ray tube

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14
Q

What is the difference between large and small focal spots

A

Large - can withstand more heat, suffers from penumbra
Small - better image quality

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15
Q

Describe the structure and function of the tube housing

A

Lead housing place over glass, filled with oil, to cool machine
Function - X-rays are emitted 360 degrees, so lead blocks excess x-rays

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16
Q

Describe how x-rays are produced

A

-Electrons accelerated to positive anode
-Electrons slam into heavy metal atoms in anode
-Electrons transfer energy to target
-Electrons interact with either orbital electrons or nucleus
-As well as k shell electrons, electrons also interact with outer shell electrons - excitation causing heat