Paper detail

Detective quantum efficiency of photon-counting CdTe and Si detectors for computed tomography: a simulation study

Purpose: Developing photon-counting CT detectors requires understanding the impact of parameters such as converter material, absorption length and pixel size. We apply a novel linear-systems framework, incorporating spatial and energy resolution, to study realistic silicon (Si) and cadmium telluride (CdTe) detectors at low count rate. Approach: We compared CdTe detector designs with $0.5\times0.5\; \mathrm{mm}^2$ and $0.225\times0.225\; \mathrm{mm}^2$ pixels and Si detector designs with $0.5\times0.5\; \mathrm{mm}^2$ pixels of 30 and 60 mm active absorption length, with and without tungsten scatter blockers. Monte-Carlo simulations of photon transport were used together with Gaussian charge sharing models fitted to published data. Results: For detection in a 300 mm thick object at 120 kVp, the 0.5 mm and 0.225 mm pixel CdTe systems have 28-41 $\%$ and 5-29 $\%$ higher DQE, respectively, than the 60 mm Si system with tungsten, whereas the corresponding numbers for two-material decomposition are 2 $\%$ lower to 11 $\%$ higher DQE and 31-54 $\%$ lower DQE compared to Si. We also show that combining these detectors with dual-spectrum acquisition is beneficial. Conclusions: In the low-count-rate regime, CdTe detector systems outperform the Si systems for detection tasks, while silicon outperforms one or both of the CdTe systems for material decomposition.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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