High sensitivity organic inorganic hybrid X-ray detectors with direct transduction and broadband response

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Abstract

X-ray detectors are critical to healthcare diagnostics, cancer therapy and homeland security, with many potential uses limited by system cost and/or detector dimensions. Current X-ray detector sensitivities are limited by the bulk X-ray attenuation of the materials and consequently necessitate thick crystals (~1 mm–1 cm), resulting in rigid structures, high operational voltages and high cost. Here we present a disruptive, flexible, low cost, broadband, and high sensitivity direct X-ray transduction technology produced by embedding high atomic number bismuth oxide nanoparticles in an organic bulk heterojunction. These hybrid detectors demonstrate sensitivities of 1712 µC mGy−1 cm−3 for “soft” X-rays and ~30 and 58 µC mGy−1 cm−3 under 6 and 15 MV “hard” X-rays generated from a medical linear accelerator; strongly competing with the current solid state detectors, all achieved at low bias voltages (−10 V) and low power, enabling detector operation powered by coin cell batteries.

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Thirimanne, H. M., Jayawardena, K. D. G. I., Parnell, A. J., Bandara, R. M. I., Karalasingam, A., Pani, S., … Silva, S. R. P. (2018). High sensitivity organic inorganic hybrid X-ray detectors with direct transduction and broadband response. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05301-6

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