Improved LabPET detectors using Lu1.8Gd0.2SiO5:Ce (LGSO) scintillator blocks

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Publication date
2015Author(s)
Bergeron, Mélanie; Pepin, Catherine M.; Cadorette, Jules; Loignon-Houle, Francis; Fontaine, Réjean; Lecomte, Roger
Editor(s)
Centre d'imagerie moléculaire de Sherbrooke
Subject
Positron emission tomographyAbstract
L'introduction de nouveaux scintillateurs permet d'améliorer les performances des modules de détection LabPET. // Abstract : The scintillator is one of the key building blocks that critically determine the physical performance of PET detectors.
The quest for scintillation crystals with improved characteristics
has been crucial in designing scanners with superior imaging
performance. Recently, it was shown that the decay time constant
of high lutetium content Lu[subscript 1.8]Gd[subscript 0.2]SiO[subscript5] : Ce (LGSO) scintillators can be adjusted by varying the cerium concentration from 0.025 mol% to 0.75 mol%, thus providing interesting characteristics for phoswich detectors. The high light output
(90%–120% NaI) and the improved spectral match of these
scintillators with avalanche photodiode (APD) readout promise
superior energy and timing resolutions. Moreover, their improved
mechanical properties, as compared to conventional LGSO
(Lu[subscript 0.4]Gd[subscript 1.6]SiO[subscript 5] : Ce), make block array manufacturing readily feasible. To verify these assumptions, new phoswich block arrays made of LGSO-90%Lu with low and high mol% Ce concentrations were fabricated and assembled into modules dedicated to the LabPET scanner. Typical crystal decay time constants
were 31 ns and 47 ns, respectively. Phoswich crystal identification
performed using a digital pulse shape discrimination algorithm
yielded an average 8% error. At 511 keV, an energy resolution
of 17–21% was obtained, while coincidence timing resolution
between 4.6 ns and 5.2 ns was achieved. The characteristics of
this new LGSO-based phoswich detector module are expected to
improve the LabPET scanner performance. The higher stopping
power would increase the detection efficiency. The better timing
resolution would also allow the use of a narrower coincidence
window, thus minimizing the random event rate. Altogether, these
two improvements will significantly enhance the noise equivalent
count rate performance of an all LGSO-based LabPET scanner