• Deutsch
Login

Open Access

  • Home
  • Search
  • Browse
  • Administration
  • FAQ

Refine

Author

  • Karl Ziemons (21)
  • M. Streun (21)
  • H. Larue (16)
  • C. Parl (11)
  • G. Brandenburg (10)
  • H. Halling (10)
  • E. Zimmermann (8)
  • M. Khodaverdi (4)
  • D. Christ (2)
  • G. Roeb (2)
  • H. Saleh (2)
  • S. Beer (2)
  • S. Jahnke (2)
  • S. Minwuyelet (2)
  • S. Weber (2)
  • T. Hombach (2)
  • U. Pietrzyk (2)
  • U. Schurr (2)
  • A. Hellendung (1)
  • A. Hollendung (1)
+ more

Year of publication

  • 2012 (1)
  • 2011 (1)
  • 2010 (1)
  • 2009 (1)
  • 2008 (1)
  • 2006 (5)
  • 2005 (1)
  • 2004 (3)
  • 2003 (2)
  • 2002 (3)
  • 2001 (1)
  • 2000 (1)

21 search hits

  • 1 to 10
  • BibTeX
  • CSV
  • RIS
  • 10
  • 20
  • 50
  • 100

Sort by

  • Year
  • Year
  • Title
  • Title
  • Author
  • Author
Treating the Gain Non-Uniformity of Multi Channel PMTs by Channel-Specific Trigger Levels (2006)
M. Streun ; U. Chavan ; H. Lame ; C. Parl ; Mattea Müller-Veggian ; Karl Ziemons
Development of an optimized LSO/LuYAP phoswich detector head for the Lausanne ClearPET demonstrator (2006)
J.-B. Mosset ; O. Devroede ; M. Krieguer ; M. Rey ; J.-M. Vieira ; J. H. Jung ; C. Kuntner ; M. Streun ; Karl Ziemons ; E. Auffray ; P. Sempere-Roldan ; P. Lecoq ; P. Bruyndonckx ; J.-F. Loude ; S. Tavernier ; C. Morcel
This paper describes the LSO/LuYAP phoswich detector head developed for the ClearPET small animal PET scanner demonstrator that is under construction in Lausanne within the Crystal Clear Collaboration. The detector head consists of a dual layer of 8×8 LSO and LuYAP crystal arrays coupled to a multi-anode photomultiplier tube (Hamamatsu R7600-M64). Equalistion of the LSO/LuYAP light collection is obtained through partial attenuation of the LSO scintillation light using a thin aluminum deposit of 20-35 nm on LSO and appropriate temperature regulation of the phoswich head between 30°C to 60°C. At 511keV, typical FWHM energy resolutions of the pixels of a phoswich head amounts to (28±2)% for LSO and (25±2)% for LuYAP. The LSO versus LuYAP crystal identification efficiency is better than 98%. Six detector modules have been mounted on a rotating gantry. Axial and tangential spatial resolutions were measured up to 4 cm from the scanner axis and compared to Monte Carlo simulations using GATE. FWHM spatial resolution ranges from 1.3 mm on axis to 2.6 mm at 4 cm from the axis.
Validation of GEANT3 simulation studies with a dual-head PMT ClearPET™ prototype (2004)
Karl Ziemons ; U. Heinrichs ; M. Streun ; U. Pietrzyk
The ClearPET™ project is proposed by working groups of the Crystal Clear Collaboration (CCC) to develop a 2nd generation high performance small animal positron emission tomograph (PET). High sensitivity and high spatial resolution is foreseen for the ClearPET™ camera by using a phoswich arrangement combining mixed lutetium yttrium aluminum perovskite (LuYAP:Ce) and lutetium oxyorthosilicate (LSO) scintillating crystals. Design optimizations for the first photomultiplier tube (PMT) based ClearPET camera are done with a Monte-Carlo simulation package implemented on GEANT3 (CERN, Geneva, Switzerland). A dual-head prototype has been built to test the frontend electronics and was used to validate the implementation of the GEANT3 simulation tool. Multiple simulations were performed following the experimental protocols to measure the intrinsic resolution and the sensitivity profile in axial and radial direction. Including a mean energy resolution of about 27.0% the simulated intrinsic resolution is about (1.41±0.11)mm compared to the measured of (1.48±0.06)mm. The simulated sensitivity profiles show a mean square deviation of 12.6% in axial direction and 3.6% in radial direction. Satisfactorily these results are representative for all designs and confirm the scanner geometry.
Simulation studies of optical photons in monolithic block scintillators (2012)
M. Streun ; R. Al-Kaddoum ; C. Parl ; U. Pietrzyk ; Karl Ziemons ; S. van Waasen
The interest in PET detectors with monolithic block scintillators is growing. In order to obtain high spatial resolutions dedicated positioning algorithms are required. But even an ideal algorithm can only deliver information which is provided by the detector. In this simulation study we investigated the light distribution on one surface of cuboid LSO scintillators of different size. Scintillators with a large aspect ratio (small footprint and large height) showed significant position information only for a minimum interaction depth of the gamma particle. The results allow a quantitative estimate for a useful aspect ratio.
Effects of crosstalk and gain nonuniformity using multichannel PMTs in the Clearpet® scanner (2005)
M. Streun ; D. Christ ; A. Hellendung ; H. Larue ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
The ClearPET® scanners developed by the Crystal Clear Collaboration use multichannel PMTs as photodetectors with scintillator pixels coupled individually to each channel. In order to localize an event each channel anode is connected to a comparator that triggers when the anode signal exceeds a common predefined threshold. Two major difficulties here are crosstalk of light and the gain nonuniformity of the PMT channels. Crosstalk can generate false triggering in channels adjacent to the actual event. On the one hand this can be suppressed by sufficiently increasing the threshold, but on the other hand a threshold too high can already prevent valid events on the lower gain channels from being detected. Finally, both effects restrict the dynamic range of pulse heights that can be processed. The requirements to the dynamic range are not low as the ClearPET® scanners detect the depth of interaction by phoswich pixels consisting of LSO and Lu0.7Y0.3AP, two scintillators with different light yields. We will present a model to estimate the achievable dynamic range and show solutions to increase it.
Pulse recording by free-running sampling (2000)
M. Streun ; G. Brandenburg ; H. Larue ; E. Zimmermann ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
Pulses from a position-sensitive photomultiplier (PS-PMT) are recorded by free running ADCs at a sampling rate of 40 MHz. A four-channel acquisition-board has been developed which is equipped with four 12 bit-ADCs connected to one FPGA (field programmable gate array). The FPGA manages data acquisition and the transfer to the host computer. It can also work as a digital trigger, so a separate hardware-trigger can be omitted. The method of free running sampling provides a maximum of information, besides the pulse charge and amplitude also pulse shape and starting time are contained in the sampled data. These informations are crucial for many tasks such as distinguishing between different scintillator materials, determination of radiation type, pile-up recovery, coincidence detection or time-of-flight applications. The absence of an analog integrator allows coping with very high count rates. Since this method is going to be employed in positron emission tomography (PET), the position of an event is another important information. The simultaneous readout of four channels allows localization by means of center-of-gravity weighting. First results from a test setup with LSO-scintillators coupled to the PS-PMT are presented
Pulse recording by free-running sampling (2001)
M. Streun ; G. Brandenburg ; H. Larue ; E. Zimmermann ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
Pulses from a position-sensitive photomultiplier (PS-PMT) are recorded by free-running ADCs at a sampling rate of 40 MHz. A four-channel acquisition board has been developed which is equipped with four 12-bit ADCs connected to one field programmable gate array (FPGA). The FPGA manages data acquisition and the transfer to the host computer. It can also work as a digital trigger, so a separate hardware trigger can be omitted. The method of free-running sampling provides a maximum of information, besides the pulse charge and amplitude also pulse shape and starting time are contained in the sampled data. This information is crucial for many tasks such as distinguishing between different scintillator materials, determination of radiation type, pile-up recovery, coincidence detection or time-of-flight applications. The absence of an analog integrator allows very high count rates to be dealt with. Since this method is to be employed in positron emission tomography (PET), the position of an event is also important. The simultaneous readout of four channels allows localization by means of center-of-gravity weighting. First results from a test setup with LSO scintillators coupled to the PS-PMT are presented here
A PET system with free running ADCs (2002)
M. Streun ; G. Brandenburg ; H. Larue ; E. Zimmermann ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
A small PET system has been built up with two multichannel photomultipliers, which are attached to a matrix of 64 single LSO crystals each. The signal from each multiplier is being sampled continuously by a 12 bit ADC at a sampling frequency of 40 MHz. In case of a scintillation pulse a subsequent FPGA sends the corresponding set of samples together with the channel information and a time mark to the host computer. The data transfer is performed with a rate of 20 MB/s. On the host all necessary information is extracted from the data. The pulse energy is determined, coincident events are detected and multiple hits within one matrix can be identified. In order to achieve a narrow time window the pulse starting time is refined further than the resolution of the time mark (=25 ns) would allow. This is possible by interpolating between the pulse samples. First data obtained from this system will be presented. The system is part of developments for a much larger system and has been created to study the feasibility and performance of the technique and the hardware architecture.
A PET system based on data processing of free-running sampled pulses (2002)
M. Streun ; G. Brandenburg ; H. Larue ; E. Zimmermann ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
Within the developments for the Crystal Clear small animal PET project (CLEARPET) a dual head PET system has been established. The basic principle is the early digitization of the detector pulses by free running ADCs. The determination of the γ-energy and also the coincidence detection is performed by data processing of the sampled pulses on the host computer. Therefore a time mark is attached to each pulse identifying the current cycle of the 40 MHz sampling clock. In order to refine the time resolution the pulse starting time is interpolated from the samples of the pulse rise. The detector heads consist of multichannel PMTs with a single LSO scintillator crystal coupled to each channel. For each PMT only one ADC is required. The position of an event is obtained separately from trigger signals generated for each single channel. An FPGA is utilized for pulse buffering, generation of the time mark and for the data transfer to the host via a fast I/O-interface.
Pulse shape discrimination of LSO and LuYAP scintillators for depth of interaction detection in PET (2003)
M. Streun ; G. Brandenburg ; H. Larue ; H. Saleh ; E. Zimmermann ; Karl Ziemons ; H. Halling
A feasible way to gain the depth of interaction information in a PET scanner is the use of phoswich detectors. In general the layer of interaction is identified front the pulse shape of the corresponding scintillator material. In this work pulses from LSO and LuYAP crystals were investigated in order to find a practical method of distinguishing. It turned out that such a pulse processing could he kept simple due to an additional slow component in the light decay of the LuYAP pulse. At the same time the short decay time guarantees that the major amount of the light output is still collected within a short pulse recording time.
  • 1 to 10

OPUS4 Logo

  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Datenschutzerklärung
  • Sitelinks