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THOMSON ELECTRON X-RAY SOURCE FOR MEDICAL APPLICATIONS

E.G. BESSONOV1, R.M. FESHCHENKO1*, M.V. GORBUNKOV1, V.I. SHVEDUNOV2 and A.V. VINOGRADOV1
1 2

P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute, 119991 Russia, Moscow Leninskii Prospect 53 Nuclear Physics Institute of Moscow State University, 119899 Russia, Moscow, Vorobyevy Gory

Abstract A source of medical x-rays based on a 50 Mev storage ring and a quasi-continues picosecond laser is considered. It is shown that such generator produces useful X-ray flux with higher average power and higher efficiency than that of conventional X-ray tubes. The main energy losses are related to coherent synchrotron radiation. Taking this into account the required parameters of the storage ring and injector are determined.

Keywords: Thompson scattering; X-rays; iodine; medicine 1. INTRODUCTION The experiments with synchrotron radiation sources confirmed that the use of narrowband X-ray beams extends substantially diagnostics capabilities in mammography, bronchography, angiography, computer tomography etc [1-3]. Apart from the image contrast improvement there are several other advantages of this method: possibility for subtraction of images taken at the wavelengths before and after absorption K-edge of the contrast element (usually iodine), reduction of radiation dose and amount of the contrast material, intravenous (catheterless) angiography of coronary arteries, etc. Actually new attractive methods of X-ray diagnostics are emerging. However further development and practical applications of these methods depend on the availability of a compact (as compared with synchrotrons) narrowband Xray source suitable for installation in medical centers and hospitals. As a rule it should work in the energy range 20 -50 kev that includes K absorption edges of the elements I and Gd used in contrast compounds. As a solution of the problem of narrowband compact X-ray source it was proposed to generate X-rays in collisions of a laser beam with an electron beam moving in opposite direction. In such an approach the electron beam energy decreases from several

*

Corresponding author: P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute, 119991 Russia, Moscow Leninskii Prospect 53 ; e-mail: rusl@sci.lebedev.ru

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Gev (as for the systems based on synchrotrons with magnetic undulators) to tens Mev and the dimension of the device changes from tens of meters down to several meters. To produce electron beams for this

purpose both storage rings [4,5] accelerators [6] can be utilized. In the energy losses and efficiency generator based on a storage repetitive laser is considered.

and linear this paper of X-ray ring and

Table I. The parameters of the laser electron X-ray generator. E ­ the electron energy, R ­ the bending radius, C ­ the orbit circumference, T ­ the revolution period, J ­ current, le ­ the bunch length, f ­ repetition frequency, L ­ the laser pulse energy, PL ­ the average laser power, L ­ the laser pulse duration, r ­ the energy of the laser pulse in the cavity. X-ray photon flux caused by Thomson Storage ring
E, Mev 46 91 R, m 0.5 , m 6 T, ns 20 Ne 1.2510
10

J, A 0.1

le, cm 1.2

The source of optical radiation Laser
h L, ev 1 F, MHz 50 sL cm2 310
-5

Cavity
PL=fL, W 60 L, ps <40 (1-r)
-1

L, µJ 1.2

r, mJ 4,8

410

3

2. LASER-ELECTRON X-RAY GENERATOR (LEXG) The X-ray photon flux required for coronary arteries subtraction angiography is estimated as: 2*1014 s ­1 (1) at the surface of a human body [7,8]. The time necessary to obtain a single image must be 2-4 ms, and the frame rate ­ 20 ­ 30 s-1 [9]. In the electron rest frame the process of laser photon scattering by an electron is the classical Thompson scattering. The energy of the scattered (X-ray) photon in the laboratory frame is: h = 4 2 h L , (2) where h L ­ laser photon energy and = E / mc 2 , E ­ electron energy. The average

T -1 L (1 - r ) , s = se+sL, (3) s where Ne is the number of electrons in the bunch, T = 6.6 10 -25 cm2 ­ Thompson cross-section, L ­ the laser photon flux, (1 - r )-1 ­ the finesse of the optical cavity, which is used to enhance the power of the laser beam in the interaction region, se and sL ­ the cross section areas of the electron and laser beams respectively. We assume that both laser and electron beams consist of bunches following with equal repetition rate and having equal cross-section areas se=sL=s/2 (see Appendix A). Using (2), (3) it is easy to show that Xray flux required by (1) can be attained with a system consisting of a storage ring, a laser and an optical cavity, which parameters are given in Table I. The listed parameters either =N
e

scattering is:

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have been already achieved or close to the achieved ones in existing setups [10]. The electron bunch length in Table I was chosen equal to double Raleigh length of laser beam: l e = 2 z L = 4s L / = 4se / assuming the Gaussian electron density distribution in transverse direction (see Appendix A). Then the storage ring emittance is 0.1 mmmrad. In the next sections we estimate the electron beam energy losses and the X-ray generator efficiency. 3. THE SYNCHROTRON RADIATION LOSSES The main source of electron energy losses in our storage ring (see Table I) is coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR), which spectrum lies in the microwave region. The CSR power for a bunch with Gaussian longitudinal charge density distribution can be estimated as (see Appendix A): 31 / 6 2 ( 2 / 3 ) re cN 2 (4) P= mc 2 2 / 3 4 /3 2 R l ( 1 + µ ) where re=2.810-13 cm, 1 + µ = C / 2R , C ­ is the perimeter of the electron orbit. Substituting the values from Table I for the LESG into (4) and also supposing µ = 1 we obtain: P=1.1 kW, E = 11 kev, (5) where E is the energy lost by an electron in one revolution. This energy loss is compensated by the storage ring radio frequency (RF) cavity. The accelerating voltage there should not be less than U=250 kV in order to provide the stability of the electron bunch (see Appendix B). In the next section the storage ring power consumption is estimated. 4. STORAGE RING AND INJECTOR As an injector for the storage ring it is reasonable to take a compact highly efficient race-track microtron with photo-cathode electron gun [11]. To simplify storage ring operation the injection energy should be close to the final energy of the stored electrons. To

store ~1 nC charge in a single ring bunch multi-turn injection can be used with the injector operating in single bunch mode with 100-150 pC bunch charge and bunch repetition frequency dependent on the ring damping time. The use of rare-earth permanent magnets in the injector and storage ring design will essentially decrease energy consumption. In the storage ring with permanent magnets the required electric power is defined mainly by an RF power PRF necessary to produce the accelerating structure voltage U inside the accelerating structure (single RF cavity or a chain of coupled cavities):

where Z ­ is the effective shunt impedance and L ­ is the structure's electrical length. is Because of Z f RF , where fRF operating frequency, for a fixed structure length the RF power required decreases with frequency increase. Some aspects of storage ring beam dynamics are also favorable to higher frequency. Other considerations, in particular the separatrix size, the cavity beam hole aperture favors lower frequency. The final choice hasn't been made yet, so two possibilities were considered: 2856 MHz ­ equal to the injector operating frequency [11], and 571.2 MHz ­ the fifth subharmonic. Consider elliptical form cavity, which has 1.5-2 times lower shunt impedance as compared with the optimized cavity, but is more stable with respect to multipactor discharge and parasitic modes excitation. With such a cavity one obtains Z 30 M/m and PRF 8 kW for L = 0.2625 m (five half wavelength coupled cavities chain) at 2856 MHz, and Z 13.4 M/m, PRF 18 kW for the single cavity of the same length at 571.2 MHz. The RF power dissipated per unit length in the considered cases is 30 kW/m and 69 kW/m, respectively. These thermal loads will not change essentially structure parameters if the cooling channels are properly constructed. Taking into account beam loading and RF amplifier efficiency, the
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U2 PRF = , ZL

(7)


Fig 1. The scheme of laser-electron X-ray generator: 1 - injector, 2 ­ storage ring, 3 - laser, 4 ­ optical cavity, 5 ­ a damp for laser beam.

full power consumption from the socket will be about 20 and 40 kW, respectively. 5. THE SOURCE OF THE OPTICAL RADIATION AND ITS EFFICIENCY Power consumption of optical unit of LEXG can be an order of magnitude less than that required for RF system if a solid state laser with diode pumping is used. Such lasers reached tens of percent efficiency during last decade. For example, in [12] the efficiency 28% is reported for Nd:YAG laser having quasi-continuous output with average power more than 300 W. The active element was 6 mm diameter and 50 mm length cylinder pumped by six high power diode bars. Besides of efficiency, the stability of laser radiation is one more important parameter for LEXG. The enhancement of laser light power inside high finesse optical resonator implies both equal repetition rates

and careful phase matching of laser and resonator pulses. In other words the most part of every laser mode energy must be concentrated inside the bandwidth r of the corresponding resonator 1/ 2 mode, r = c(1 - r ) / 2 r Lc , where Lc is the length of the cavity. From this point of view optically pumped solid state lasers generating subpicosecond- and femtosecond pulses again have evident advantages [13]. For example, crystalline active mediums doped with ytterbium are successfully utilized for continues sequences of powerful subpicosecond pulses production. In [14] the average power of 60 W was obtained in a Yb:YAG laser with the duration of a single pulse 0.81 ps, and optical power of a linier diode assembly being 370 W. Estimated efficiency is not less than 5%. A significant decrease of the optical source average power can be achieved with

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the transition from quasi-continues ultrashort pulse sequence to generation of pulse trains with train duration 2-4 ms corresponding to accumulation time of one X-ray image and with train repetition rate being 20-30 Hz. Such mode of operation can be reached using external negative feed-back loop [10]. Thus from the above discussion it follows that the power necessary to feed the optical unit of LEXG is less than 2-3 kW. 6. DISCUSSION Estimations given in sections 4 and 5 show that for production of ~1 W (see (1)) of X-ray radiation with photon energy h L = 33 kev a laser-electron X-ray generator with electrical power consumption 25-45 kW is required. In respect of efficiency (the ratio of useful X-ray flux to electric power consumption) LEXG surpasses X-ray tubes. Note that medical X-ray tubes utilized in angiography have power up to 100 kW [9,15,16]. No doubts that if physical and technical problems connected with the development of LEXG are resolved such Xray sources will find wide application in medicine and other fields. Except the scheme shown in figure 1 there are other possibilities to increase the coupling of electron and laser beams in order to provide necessary X-ray flux. For instance high-energy laser pulse circulation obtained by switching of a Pockel's cell inside the optical resonator may be used [17]. The practical optical scheme should satisfy several conditions: resistance of the mirrors and other optical elements to laser and X-ray radiation loading, synchronization of laser pulses with electron bunches, time and phase matching of optical resonator with the laser beam etc. This will require special research. 7. CONCLUSION A new X-ray generator for medical applications can be designed on the basis of a storage ring with electron energy ~50 Mev and a picosecond laser. If high finesse optical

resonator is used the plug efficiency of such a generator can be higher than that of conventional X-ray tubes. Other advantages of LEXG as compared to X-ray tubes are: narrowband X-ray beam, the absence of high energy "tail" in photon spectrum, the possibility of fine tuning of X-ray photons energy by changing the electron energy, image quality improvement by subtraction of images taken at different wavelengths near iodine K absorption edge, reduction of the necessary quantity of contrast materials and radiation dose received by a patient and medical staff, opportunity of catheterless angiography introduction into the wide medical practice. Thus, a compact laser-electron X-ray generator can be considered as a promising direction of accelerator, laser and optical technology development. APPENDIX A. ON THE ELECTRON ENERGY LOSSES CONNECTED WITH COHERENT SYNCHROTRON RADIATION Derivation of formula (3) assumed Gaussian radial density distribution of electrons and photons: 2 2 1 ( x) = e - x / 2 , ) 2 where is the mean square transversal beam size connected with the effective area of the cross section as s = 2 2 . In the longitudinal direction the mean square transversal laser beam size changes in accordance with formula: L ( z) =
L

1+

z2 , 2 zL

2)

2 where z L = 2s L / = 4 L / is the Raleigh length. The mean square transversal size of the electron beam is governed by the same law. The role of Raleigh length in this case plays the -function at the central point of interaction of laser and electron beams. The focal beam size is determined by the

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expression e = ( ) , where is the emittance of the electron beam. Formula (4) for coherent synchrotron radiation losses was obtained by L.Schiff in 1946 [18]. Similar formulas were derived in [1921]. However numerical coefficients there are respectively 21/6 1.12, 27/3 5.04 and 28/3 6.35 times more than in (4) . The analysis made by E.G. Bessonov and R.M. Feshchenko [22] supported the results of L.Schiff.
1/ 2

enlarges the bunch length [20]. The stability criteria in terms of equation (B1) are provided dV ( ) by relation < 0 kept in the vicinity of d phase s , occupied by bunch electrons. Using equation for coherent synchrotron radiarad tion power Pcoh ( ) [20] we obtain: U > Um = 31 / 6 2
2/3

+ µ ) 2 (2 / 3) NeR hl e7 en sin s

(1

4/3 /3

,

en = 2,718... (B3) Under this condition electron trajectories stay stable in spite of destabilizing role of coherent synchrotron radiation. Substituting h =10, sin s 1 and other parameters from the Table I into (B3) we get U > 120 kV. In order the coherent synchrotron radiation would not change essentially equilibrium bunch dimensions this inequality must be fulfilled with some spare. More details for electron beam dynamics in the coherent synchrotron radiation field can be found in [22]. ACKNOLEDGEMENT This paper and the attendance at the conference of R.M. Feshchenko were supported under ISTC project # 2297. REFERENCES 1. B.Jacobsen, Acta Radiol., 39, 437 (1953). 2. E.Rubinstein et.al., Proc. SPIE, 314, 42 (1981). 3. M.Ando and C.Uyama (Eds.), Medical application of synchrotron radiation (SpringerVerlag, 1998) 4. R. Tatchyn, Remarks on the role of multilayer optics and short period insertion devices for medical imaging sources and application (see[3], pp139-148).

APPENDIX B. THE EFFECT OF COHERENT SYNCHROTRON RADIATION ON THE STORAGE RING BEAM DYNAMICS Balance of energy gained by an electron in the RF cavity and lost due to synchrotron radiation and Thomson scattering defines an equation for electron phase oscillations in the storage ring [23,24]: rad d 2 k i Pnoncoh d he 2 2 - 1 + - V ( ) = 0 , E dt 2E 2 - 1 dt 2 (B1) 2 rad rad V ( ) = Pcoh ( ) - Pcoh ( s ) + , e U (cos - cos s ) (B2) where ki is the exponent in the energy derad pendence of incoherent losses, Pnoncoh - the total energy losses due to incoherent synchrotron radiation and Thomson scattering, rad Pcoh ( ) - the energy losses for coherent synchrotron radiation, = 2R / (1 + µ )c ­ the revolution frequency (which is supposed to be equal to the laser repetition rate), - the momentum compaction factor, s ­ the particle phase in the center of the bunch, the rest parameters were defined above. Equations (B1), (B2) determine conditions for bunch stability in the storage ring. Incoherent synchrotron radiation and Thomson scattering provide slow damping of the phase oscillations and can be neglected in the first approximation. Coherent synchrotron radiation force acting on the electrons

[

]

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5. Zhirong Huang and R.D.Ruth, Phys. Rev. Lett., 80, 976 (1998). 6. F.E.Carrol, AJR, 187, 1197 (2003). 7. T.Dill, Synchrotron Radiation News, 11, N2, 12 (1998). 8. Y. Sugishita, Medical activities of synchrotron radiation in Japan ­ Intravenous coronary angiography, (see [3], pp 15-21). 9. A.M.Babunachvili, V.A.Ivanov, S.A. Biryukov and Stenting of Coronary Arteries, (ACB-Publishing, Moscow, 1996) (in Russian). 10. 11. (1998). 12. 13. 14. 15. S. Fujikawa, K. Furuta, and K. Yasui, P.G.Kryukov, Quantum Electronics, E.Innerhofer, et.al., Optics Letters, 28, N.N.Blinov (ed.), Principles of X-ray Optics Letters, 26, 602 (2001). 31, 95 (2001). 367 (2003). Diagnostics Technology (Medicine, Moscow, 2002) (in Russian). E.G.Bessonov, et al, Physics-Uspekhi, A.S. Alimov, et al, NIM B, 139, 511 46, 872 (2003).

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Rev., 96, 180 (1954). JETP, 37, 118, (1959) (in Russian). M.V.Yurkov, TESLA FEL Report 96-14, November 1996. 22.
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V.I.Shvedunov, physics/(in preparation). A.A.Kolomensky and A.N.Lebedev, Theory of Cyclic Accelerators (North Holland Publishing, 1966). 24. H Wiedemann, Particle Accelerator Physics (Springer Verlag, New York, 1993)

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