Investigators at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have developed a new method, with the help of nanotechnology, that might make traditional computed tomography a much faster imaging modality.
“The current CT scanners take images sequentially, which is slow and inefficient. Using the nanotube x-ray technology, we show in this paper the feasibility of multiplexing – taking multiple images at the same time,” Zhou said. [Dr. Otto Zhou is a professor of materials science at UNC –ed.]
Carbon nanotubes, made of layers of carbon atoms, can be as small as one nanometer – one billionth of a meter – in diameter. The UNC team uses them in this work because they can emit electrons without high heat…
The team’s newest innovation combines this multiple-x-ray-source innovation with a principle called multiplexing, in which all the x-ray sources are turned on simultaneously to capture images from multiple views at the same time.
“Let’s take a simple case where suppose you need 10 images,” Zhou said. “Let’s say each view take one second. In the conventional step-and-shoot method used for the current CT scanners, you take one shot, and the first pixel stays on for one second. Then we turn on the second pixel, and that stays on for one second.” The whole process would take 10 seconds.
“With multiplexing, we can have all the x-ray pixels on at the same time for maybe 2 seconds. You still get all the images, only faster, and we need only about half of the original x-ray peak power,” Zhou said.
Multiplexing is a known concept used by, for instance, cellular phones. Millions of cell phone signals travel along the same frequency band, then are separated into coherent messages at their destinations.
“What makes the multiplexing CT scanning possible is the novel multi-pixel x-ray source we developed and the ability to program each x-ray pixel electronically,” Zhou said.
In this study, Zhou and colleagues took images of a computer circuit board using a prototype multiplexing scanner, then compared the images to those generated by a traditional x-ray scanner. The images showed little difference in resolution or clarity, but the prototype multiplexing scanner got the job done faster.
“For this paper we built a prototype or demonstration scanner that gives a limited number of views, to image a simple object,” Zhou said. “Our next step is to develop a small CT scanner for small animal imaging.”