Showing posts with label filament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label filament. Show all posts

December 28, 2020

Why Nanox source is digital

Because it is digitally switched with low voltage (30V+), according to this patent.  But so is any hot-cathode source, with filament voltage as low as 3V, and possibly an extra grid or Wehnelt cup electrode.

Wehnelt cup (source:  Lambtron at Wikipedia)

Update March 24, 2021:  A good slide from a IAEA on grid-controlled tubes use in pulsed fluoroscopy:



How fast can you switch?  A 1984 paper says pulse width down to 19 microseconds (says that at the time, fluoroscopy and CT did not requires pulse widths less than 1 millisecond).  The 120kVp is switched with 3.7kVp at the grid, tube current is 125mA

Update April 6, 2021:  The switching grid, or focusing cup, is negatively biased toward the cathode (filament), at about 1kV (while in a conventional tube, the cup is connected to the filament)

December 26, 2020

Nanox uncertainty principle

Per Nanox tech page, the temperature of a (filament in a) hot cathode can never be measured, because

Hot cathode temperature is ‎over 2000 degrees Celsius

, but it is

operating at temperatures of up to 2000°C.


Hot cathode
Hot cathode (source: Nanox website, "Understanding Nanox technology & vision" video)