Abstract
The very hot and power-hungry x-ray filaments in today's computed tomography (CT) scanners constrain their design to be big and stationary. What if we built a CT scanner that could be deployed at the scene of a car accident to acquire tomographic images before moving the victim? Recent developments in nanotechnology have shown that carbon nanotubes can produce x-rays at room temperature, and with relatively low power needs. We propose a design for a portable and flexible CT scanner made up of an addressable array of tiny x-ray emitters and detectors. In this paper, we outline a basic design, propose a strategy for reconstruction, and demonstrate the feasibility of reconstruction using experiments on a software simulation of the flexible scanner. These simulations show that reconstruction quality is stable over a wide range of scanner geometries, while progressively larger errors in the scanner geometry induce progressively larger errors. We also raise a number of issues that still need to be overcome to build such a scanner. © Orchard et al.; Licensee Bentham Open.
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CITATION STYLE
Orchard, J., Kim, H. Y., & Yeow, J. T. W. (2012). Plausibility of image reconstruction using a proposed flexible and portable CT scanner. Open Medical Imaging Journal, 6, 1–11. https://doi.org/10.2174/1874347101206010001
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