368 research outputs found

    Development of a silicon photomultiplier based innovative and low cost positron emission tomography scanner.

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    The Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM) is a state-of-the-art semiconductor photodetector consisting of a high density matrix (up to 104) of independent pixels of micro-metric dimension (from 10 \u3bcm to 100 \u3bcm) which form a macroscopic unit of 1 to 6 mm2 area. Each pixel is a single-photon avalanche diode operated with a bias voltage of a few volts above the breakdown voltage. When a charge carrier is generated in a pixel by an incoming photon or a thermal effect, a Geiger discharge confined to that pixel is initiated and an intrinsic gain of about 106 is obtained. The output signal of a pixel is the same regardless of the number of interacting photons and provide only a binary information. Since the pixels are arranged on a common Silicon substrate and are connected in parallel to the same readout line, the SiPM combined output response corresponds to the sum of all fired pixel currents. As a result, the SiPM as a whole is an analogue detector, which can measure the incoming light intensity. Nowadays a great number of companies are investing increasing efforts in SiPM detector performances and high quality mass production. SiPMs are in rapid evolution and benefit from the tremendous development of the Silicon technology in terms of cost production, design flexibility and performances. They have reached a high single photon detection sensitivity and photon detection efficiency, an excellent time resolution, an extended dynamic range. They require a low bias voltage and have a low power consumption, they are very compact, robust, flexible and cheap. Considering also their intrinsic insensitivity to magnetic field they result to have an extremely high potential in fundamental and applied science (particle and nuclear physics, astrophysics, biology, environmental science and nuclear medicine) and industry. The SiPM performances are influenced by some effects, as saturation, afterpulsing and crosstalk, which lead to an inherent non-proportional response with respect to the number of incident photons. Consequently, it is not trivial to relate the measured electronic signal to the corresponding light intensity. Since for most applications it is desirable to qualify the SiPM response (i.e in order to properly design a detector for a given application, perform corrections on measurements or on energy spectra, calibrate a SiPM for low light measurements, predict detector performance) the implementation of characterization procedures plays a key role. The SiPM field of application that has been considered in this thesis is the Positron Emission Tomography (PET). PET represents the most advanced in-vivo nuclear imaging modality: it provides functional information of the physiological and molecular processes of organs and tissues. Thanks to its diagnostic power, PET has a recognized superiority over all other imaging modalities in oncology, neurology and cardiology. SiPMs are usually successfully employed for the PET scanners because they allow the measurement of the Time Of Flight of the two coincidence photons to improve the signal to noise ratio of the reconstructed images. They also permit to perfectly combine the functional information with the anatomical one by inserting the PET scanner inside the Magnetic Resonance Imaging device. Recently, PET technology has also been applied to preclinical imaging to allow non invasive studies on small animals. The increasing demand for preclinical PET scanner is driven by the fact that small animals host a large number of human diseases. In-vivo imaging has the advantage to enable the measurement of the radiopharmaceutical distribution in the same animal for an extended period of time. As a result, PET represents a powerful research tool as it offers the possibility to study the abnormalities at the origin of a disease, understand its dynamics, evaluate the therapeutic response and develop new drugs and treatments. However, the cost and the complexity of the preclinical scanners are limiting factors for the spread of PET technology: 70-80% of small-animal PET is concentrated in academic or government research laboratories. The EasyPET concept proposed in this Thesis, protected under a patent filed by Aveiro University, aims to achieve a simple and affordable preclinical PET scanner. The innovative concept is based on a single pair of detector kept collinear during the whole data acquisition and a moving mechanism with two degrees of freedom to reproduce the functionalities of an entire PET ring. The main advantages are in terms of the reduction of the complexity and cost of the PET system. In addition the concept is bound to be robust against acollinear photoemission, scatter radiation and parallax error. The sensitivity is expected to represent a fragility due to the reduced geometrical acceptance. This drawback can be partially recovered by the possibility to accept Compton scattering events without introducing image degradation effects, thanks to the sensor alignment. A 2D imaging demonstrator has been realized in order to assess the EasyPET concept and its performance has been analyzed in this Thesis to verify the net balance between competing advantages and drawbacks. The demonstrator had a leading role in the outreach activity to promote the EasyPET concept and a significant outcome is represented by the new partners that recently joined the collaboration. The EasyPET has been licensed to Caen S.p.a. and, thanks to the participation of Nuclear Instruments to the electronic board re-designed, a new prototype has been realized with additional improvements concerning the mechanics and the control software. In this Thesis the prototype functionalities and performances are reported as a result of a commissioning procedure. The EasyPET will be commercialized by Caen S.p.a. as a product for the educational market and it will be addressed to high level didactic laboratories to show the operating principles and technology behind the PET imaging. The topics mentioned above will be examined in depth in the following Chapters according to the subsequent order. In Chapter 1 the Silicon Photomultiplier will be described in detail, from their operating principle to their main application fields passing through the advantages and the drawback effects connected with this type of sensor. Chapter 2 is dedicated to a SiPM standard characterization method based on the staircase and resolving power measurement. A more refined analysis involves the Multi-Photon spectrum, obtained by integrating the SiPM response to a light pulse. It exploits the SiPM single photon sensitivity and its photon number resolving capability to measure some of its properties of general interest for a multitude of potential applications, disentangling the features related to the statistics of the incident light. Chapter 3 reports another SiPM characterization method which implements a post-processing of the digitized SiPM waveforms with the aim of extracting a full picture of the sensor characteristics from a unique data-set. The procedure is very robust, effective and semi-automatic and suitable for sensors of various dimensions and produced by different vendors. Chapter 4 introduces the Positron Emission Tomography imaging: its principle, applications, related issues and state of the art of PET scanner will be explained. Chapter 5 deals with the preclinical PET, reporting the benefits and the technological challenges involved, the performance of the commercially available small animal PET scanners, the main applications and the frontier research in this field. In Chapter 6 the EasyPET concept is introduced. In particular, the basic idea behind the operating principle, the design layout and the image reconstruction will be illustrated and then assessed through the description and the performance analysis of the EasyPET proof of concept and demonstrator. The effect of the use of different sensor to improve the light collection and the coincidence detection efficiency, together with the analysis of the importance of the sensor and the crystal alignment will be reported in Chapter 7. The design, the functionalities and the commissioning of the EasyPET prototype addressed to the educational market will be defined in Chapter 8. Finally, Chapter 9 contains a summary of the conclusions and an outlook of the future research studies

    Development of a silicon photomultiplier based innovative and low cost positron emission tomography scanner.

    Get PDF
    The Silicon Photomultiplier (SiPM) is a state-of-the-art semiconductor photodetector consisting of a high density matrix (up to 104) of independent pixels of micro-metric dimension (from 10 μm to 100 μm) which form a macroscopic unit of 1 to 6 mm2 area. Each pixel is a single-photon avalanche diode operated with a bias voltage of a few volts above the breakdown voltage. When a charge carrier is generated in a pixel by an incoming photon or a thermal effect, a Geiger discharge confined to that pixel is initiated and an intrinsic gain of about 106 is obtained. The output signal of a pixel is the same regardless of the number of interacting photons and provide only a binary information. Since the pixels are arranged on a common Silicon substrate and are connected in parallel to the same readout line, the SiPM combined output response corresponds to the sum of all fired pixel currents. As a result, the SiPM as a whole is an analogue detector, which can measure the incoming light intensity. Nowadays a great number of companies are investing increasing efforts in SiPM detector performances and high quality mass production. SiPMs are in rapid evolution and benefit from the tremendous development of the Silicon technology in terms of cost production, design flexibility and performances. They have reached a high single photon detection sensitivity and photon detection efficiency, an excellent time resolution, an extended dynamic range. They require a low bias voltage and have a low power consumption, they are very compact, robust, flexible and cheap. Considering also their intrinsic insensitivity to magnetic field they result to have an extremely high potential in fundamental and applied science (particle and nuclear physics, astrophysics, biology, environmental science and nuclear medicine) and industry. The SiPM performances are influenced by some effects, as saturation, afterpulsing and crosstalk, which lead to an inherent non-proportional response with respect to the number of incident photons. Consequently, it is not trivial to relate the measured electronic signal to the corresponding light intensity. Since for most applications it is desirable to qualify the SiPM response (i.e in order to properly design a detector for a given application, perform corrections on measurements or on energy spectra, calibrate a SiPM for low light measurements, predict detector performance) the implementation of characterization procedures plays a key role. The SiPM field of application that has been considered in this thesis is the Positron Emission Tomography (PET). PET represents the most advanced in-vivo nuclear imaging modality: it provides functional information of the physiological and molecular processes of organs and tissues. Thanks to its diagnostic power, PET has a recognized superiority over all other imaging modalities in oncology, neurology and cardiology. SiPMs are usually successfully employed for the PET scanners because they allow the measurement of the Time Of Flight of the two coincidence photons to improve the signal to noise ratio of the reconstructed images. They also permit to perfectly combine the functional information with the anatomical one by inserting the PET scanner inside the Magnetic Resonance Imaging device. Recently, PET technology has also been applied to preclinical imaging to allow non invasive studies on small animals. The increasing demand for preclinical PET scanner is driven by the fact that small animals host a large number of human diseases. In-vivo imaging has the advantage to enable the measurement of the radiopharmaceutical distribution in the same animal for an extended period of time. As a result, PET represents a powerful research tool as it offers the possibility to study the abnormalities at the origin of a disease, understand its dynamics, evaluate the therapeutic response and develop new drugs and treatments. However, the cost and the complexity of the preclinical scanners are limiting factors for the spread of PET technology: 70-80% of small-animal PET is concentrated in academic or government research laboratories. The EasyPET concept proposed in this Thesis, protected under a patent filed by Aveiro University, aims to achieve a simple and affordable preclinical PET scanner. The innovative concept is based on a single pair of detector kept collinear during the whole data acquisition and a moving mechanism with two degrees of freedom to reproduce the functionalities of an entire PET ring. The main advantages are in terms of the reduction of the complexity and cost of the PET system. In addition the concept is bound to be robust against acollinear photoemission, scatter radiation and parallax error. The sensitivity is expected to represent a fragility due to the reduced geometrical acceptance. This drawback can be partially recovered by the possibility to accept Compton scattering events without introducing image degradation effects, thanks to the sensor alignment. A 2D imaging demonstrator has been realized in order to assess the EasyPET concept and its performance has been analyzed in this Thesis to verify the net balance between competing advantages and drawbacks. The demonstrator had a leading role in the outreach activity to promote the EasyPET concept and a significant outcome is represented by the new partners that recently joined the collaboration. The EasyPET has been licensed to Caen S.p.a. and, thanks to the participation of Nuclear Instruments to the electronic board re-designed, a new prototype has been realized with additional improvements concerning the mechanics and the control software. In this Thesis the prototype functionalities and performances are reported as a result of a commissioning procedure. The EasyPET will be commercialized by Caen S.p.a. as a product for the educational market and it will be addressed to high level didactic laboratories to show the operating principles and technology behind the PET imaging. The topics mentioned above will be examined in depth in the following Chapters according to the subsequent order. In Chapter 1 the Silicon Photomultiplier will be described in detail, from their operating principle to their main application fields passing through the advantages and the drawback effects connected with this type of sensor. Chapter 2 is dedicated to a SiPM standard characterization method based on the staircase and resolving power measurement. A more refined analysis involves the Multi-Photon spectrum, obtained by integrating the SiPM response to a light pulse. It exploits the SiPM single photon sensitivity and its photon number resolving capability to measure some of its properties of general interest for a multitude of potential applications, disentangling the features related to the statistics of the incident light. Chapter 3 reports another SiPM characterization method which implements a post-processing of the digitized SiPM waveforms with the aim of extracting a full picture of the sensor characteristics from a unique data-set. The procedure is very robust, effective and semi-automatic and suitable for sensors of various dimensions and produced by different vendors. Chapter 4 introduces the Positron Emission Tomography imaging: its principle, applications, related issues and state of the art of PET scanner will be explained. Chapter 5 deals with the preclinical PET, reporting the benefits and the technological challenges involved, the performance of the commercially available small animal PET scanners, the main applications and the frontier research in this field. In Chapter 6 the EasyPET concept is introduced. In particular, the basic idea behind the operating principle, the design layout and the image reconstruction will be illustrated and then assessed through the description and the performance analysis of the EasyPET proof of concept and demonstrator. The effect of the use of different sensor to improve the light collection and the coincidence detection efficiency, together with the analysis of the importance of the sensor and the crystal alignment will be reported in Chapter 7. The design, the functionalities and the commissioning of the EasyPET prototype addressed to the educational market will be defined in Chapter 8. Finally, Chapter 9 contains a summary of the conclusions and an outlook of the future research studies

    Twenty Years of Rad-Hard K14 SPAD in Space Projects

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    During last two decades, several photon counting detectors have been developed in our laboratory. One of the most promising detector coming from our group silicon K14 Single Photon Avalanche Diode (SPAD) is presented with its valuable features and space applications. Based on the control electronics, it can be operated in both gated and non-gated mode. Although it was designed for photon counting detection, it can be employed for multiphoton detection as well. With respect to control electronics employed, the timing jitter can be as low as 20 ps RMS. Detection efficiency is about 40%in range of 500 nm to 800 nm. The detector including gating and quenching circuitry has outstanding timing stability. Due to its radiation resistivity, the diode withstands 100 krad gamma ray dose without parameters degradation. Single photon detectors based on K14 SPAD were used for planetary altimeter and atmospheric lidar in MARS92/96 and Mars Surveyor ’98 space projects, respectively. Recent space applications of K14 SPAD comprises LIDAR and mainly time transfer between ground stations and artificial satellites. These include Laser Time Transfer, Time Transfer by Laser Link, and European Laser Timing projects

    The IceCube Neutrino Observatory - Contributions to ICRC 2017 Part VI: IceCube-Gen2, the Next Generation Neutrino Observatory

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    Papers on research & development towards IceCube-Gen2, the next generation neutrino observatory at South Pole, submitted to the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2017, Busan, South Korea) by the IceCube-Gen2 Collaboration

    Double Beta Decay Experiments at Canfranc Underground Laboratory

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    The first activities of the Canfranc Underground Laboratory ("Laboratorio Subterr\'aneo de Canfranc", LSC) started in the mid-eighties in a railway tunnel located under the Spanish Pyrenees; since then, it has become an international multidisciplinary facility equipped with different services for underground science. The research activity at LSC is about Astroparticle Physics, dark matter searches and neutrino Physics; but also activities in Nuclear Astrophysics, Geophysics, and Biology are carried out. The investigation of the neutrinoless double beta decay has been one of the main research lines of LSC since the beginning. Many unknowns remain in the characterization of the basic neutrino properties and the study of this rare decay process requiring Physics beyond the Standard Model of Particle Physics can shed light on the lepton number conservation, the nature of the neutrinos as Dirac or Majorana particles and the absolute scale and ordering of the masses of the three generations. Here, the double beta decay searches performed at LSC for different emitters and following very different experimental approaches will be reviewed: from the very first experiments in the laboratory including the successful IGEX for 76^{76}Ge, which released very stringent limits to the effective neutrino mass at the time, to the present NEXT experiment for 136^{136}Xe and future project CROSS ("Cryogenic Rare-event Observatory with Surface Sensitivity") for 130^{130}Te and 100^{100}Mo, both implementing innovative detector technologies to discriminate backgrounds. For the neutrinoless double beta decay channel and at 90% C.L., IGEX derived a limit to the half-life of 76^{76}Ge of T1/20ν>1.57×1025T_{1/2}^{0\nu} > 1.57 \times 10^{25} y while the corresponding expected limits are T1/20ν>1.0×1026T_{1/2}^{0\nu} > 1.0\times 10^{26} y for 136^{136}Xe from NEXT-100 (for an exposure of 500 kg.y) and T1/20ν>2.8×1025T_{1/2}^{0\nu} > 2.8 \times 10^{25} y for 100^{100}Mo from CROSS (for 5 y and 4.7 kg of isotope). Activities related to double beta decays searches carried out in other underground laboratories have also been developed at LSC and will be presented too, like the operation of the BiPo-3 detector for radiopurity measurements of thin sheets with very high sensitivity. For each one of these experiments, the concept, the experimental set-ups and relevant results will be discussed.Comment: Final version. Abbreviated abstrac

    A Hydrogenated amorphous silicon detector for Space Weather Applications

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    The characteristics of a hydrogenated amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) detector are presented here for monitoring in space solar flares and the evolution of large energetic proton events up to hundreds of MeV. The a-Si:H presents an excellent radiation hardness and finds application in harsh radiation environments for medical purposes, for particle beam characterization and in space weather science and applications. The critical flux detection threshold for solar X rays, soft gamma rays, electrons and protons is discussed in detail.Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures, submitted to Experimental Astronom
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