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  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Wilson, KJ"

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    Localisation of the lines of response in a continuous cylindrical shell PET scanner
    (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), 2019-10-07) Wilson, KJ; Alabd, R; Abolhasan, M; Franklin, DR; Safavi-Naeini, M
    This work presents a technique for localising the endpoints of the lines of response in a PET scanner based on a continuous cylindrical shell scintillator. The technique is demonstrated by applying it to a simulation of a sensitivity-optimised continuous cylindrical shell PET system using two novel scintillator materials -a transparent ceramic garnet, GLuGAG:Ce, and a LuF3:Ce-polystyrene nanocomposite. Error distributions for the endpoints of the lines of response in the axial, tangential and radial dimension as well as overall endpoint spatial error are calculated for three source positions; the resultant distribution of error in the placement of the lines of response is also estimated. © 019 Crown
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    Optimisation of monolithic nanocomposite and transparent ceramic scintillation detectors for positron emission tomography
    (Springer Nature, 2020-12-01) Wilson, KJ; Alabd, R; Abolhasan, M; Safavi-Naeini, M; Franklin, DR
    High-resolution arrays of discrete monocrystalline scintillators used for gamma photon coincidence detection in PET are costly and complex to fabricate, and exhibit intrinsically non-uniform sensitivity with respect to emission angle. Nanocomposites and transparent ceramics are two alternative classes of scintillator materials which can be formed into large monolithic structures, and which, when coupled to optical photodetector arrays, may offer a pathway to low cost, high-sensitivity, high-resolution PET. However, due to their high optical attenuation and scattering relative to monocrystalline scintillators, these materials exhibit an inherent trade-off between detection sensitivity and the number of scintillation photons which reach the optical photodetectors. In this work, a method for optimising scintillator thickness to maximise the probability of locating the point of interaction of 511 keV photons in a monolithic scintillator within a specified error bound is proposed and evaluated for five nanocomposite materials (LaBr3:Ce-polystyrene, Gd2O3-polyvinyl toluene, LaF3:Ce-polystyrene, LaF3:Ce-oleic acid and YAG:Ce-polystyrene) and four ceramics (GAGG:Ce, GLuGAG:Ce, GYGAG:Ce and LuAG:Pr). LaF3:Ce-polystyrene and GLuGAG:Ce were the best-performing nanocomposite and ceramic materials, respectively, with maximum sensitivities of 48.8% and 67.8% for 5 mm localisation accuracy with scintillator thicknesses of 42.6 mm and 27.5 mm, respectively. © The Author(s) 2020 - Open Access. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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    A simulation study of BrachyShade, a shadow-based internal source tracking system for HDR prostate brachytherapy
    (IOP Publishing, 2018-10-18) Alabd, R; Safavi-Naeini, M; Wilson, KJ; Rosenfeld, AB; Franklin, DR
    This paper presents a simulation study of BrachyShade, a proposed internal source-tracking system for real time quality assurance in high dose rate prostate brachytherapy. BrachyShade consists of a set of spherical tungsten occluders located above a pixellated silicon photodetector. The source location is estimated by minimising the mean squared error between a parametric model of the shadow image and acquired images of the shadows projected on the detector plane. A novel algorithm is finally employed to correct the systemic error resulting from Compton scattering in the medium. The worst-case error obtained with BrachyShade for a 13.5 ms image acquisition is less than 1.3 mm in the most distant part of the treatment volume, while for 75% of source locations an error of less than 0.42 mm was achieved. © 2018 Commonwealth of Australia. Department of Education and Training, and Department of Industry, Innovation and Science.

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