Fast microfocus x-ray tube based on carbon nanotube array
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A full vacuum-sealed macrofocus x-ray tube with a vertically-aligned ring-shaped carbon nanotube (CNT) emitter grown by microwave plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition is presented in this paper. The external grid allowed the CNT-based x-ray tube to exhibit transient switching on and off. The total emission current was 200 μA, which corresponds to a maximum emission current density of 10.1 A/cm2 from the ring-shaped CNT emitter when the grid voltage was 2.4 kV. The optimized focus electrode controlled the beam convergence on the target to produce a very small x-ray focal spot size less than 5 μm. Consequently, this microfocus x-ray tube could produce x-ray images with very high spatial resolution. X-ray fluoroscopy images of a multilayer printed circuit board (PCB) and field programmable gate array show distinct gold PCB traces with approximately 20 μm width.A full vacuum-sealed macrofocus x-ray tube with a vertically-aligned ring-shaped carbon nanotube (CNT) emitter grown by microwave plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition is presented in this paper. The external grid allowed the CNT-based x-ray tube to exhibit transient switching on and off. The total emission current was 200 μA, which corresponds to a maximum emission current density of 10.1 A/cm2 from the ring-shaped CNT emitter when the grid voltage was 2.4 kV. The optimized focus electrode controlled the beam convergence on the target to produce a very small x-ray focal spot size less than 5 μm. Consequently, this microfocus x-ray tube could produce x-ray images with very high spatial resolution. X-ray fluoroscopy images of a multilayer printed circuit board (PCB) and field programmable gate array show distinct gold PCB traces with approximately 20 μm width.
[1] Otto Zhou,et al. Anode thermal analysis of high power microfocus CNT x-ray tubes for in vivo small animal imaging , 2012, Medical Imaging.