4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Photon-Counting Computed Tomography and Scintillator-Based Detectors: A Simulation Analysis With Scintillating and Reflecting Materials Currently on the Market

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE
Volume 70, Issue 7, Pages 1404-1412

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNS.2023.3271694

Keywords

Photon-counting; scintillators; silicon photomultiplier (SiPM); simulation

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Photon-counting computed tomography (PCCT) has rapidly developed in the last decade and is expected to revolutionize X-ray imaging. This study focuses on evaluating SiPM-based scintillator detectors using a simulation framework that combines Monte Carlo simulations and a library to generate SiPM signals. The performance of six fast inorganic scintillators and different TiO2-epoxy mixtures is analyzed, and the count-rate capability and energy-binning efficiency are evaluated.
During the last decade, photon-counting computed tomography (PCCT) has been quickly developing, and it is expected to revolutionize the X-ray imaging field. Rapid development has also been ongoing in the scintillator and photosensor fields: fast inorganic scintillators have become available on the market, and the silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) technology has made substantial progress. Therefore, SiPM-based scintillator detectors may soon be successfully applied in challenging applications like PCCT. In this work, a simulation framework is developed to evaluate detectors composed of scintillators coupled with SiPMs. The idea is to combine Monte Carlo simulations and a library to generate SiPM signals. Focus is given to six fast inorganic scintillators currently on the market [Ce:LYSO, Ce:LuAP, Pr:LuAG, Ce:LuAG, Ce:GGAG (ceramic), and Ce:GAGG (single crystal)] and different TiO2-epoxy mixtures. The main properties of the scintillating and reflecting materials to be defined in the simulation database are characterized experimentally. Using a virtual model created within this framework, an analysis of the performance in PCCT of a SiPM-based scintillator detector composed of the considered materials is performed. Simulated pulses are processed to report on the count-rate capability. Among the studied crystals, Ce:LYSO would enable sustaining the highest rate of the interacting X-ray (2.5 Mcps/pixel with 30% of pileup). Ce:GAGG could also handle a rate of $\sim $ 1 Mcps/pixel with identical pile-up conditions. Other materials show a slow decay time in their scintillation kinetics, implicating a < 1-Mcps/pixel count rate. A qualitative evaluation of the energy-binning efficiency is also accomplished, by defining this parameter as a quality metric for multiclass classification. Scintillators with high light yield and good energy resolution (Ce:LYSO, Ce:GAGG and Ce:GGAG) present the best energy-binning performance, as expected. The dependence of this aspect is explored as a function of the pulse processing method used, the crystals size, and the pile-up probability. Resulting trends respect predictions, even though, for a more quantitative analysis, a more in-depth study is required.

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