VLSI Implementation of TDC Architectures Used in PET Imaging Systems
Mehmet Akif Ozdemir, Ali Tangel

TL;DR
This paper presents CMOS VLSI simulations of various TDC architectures for PET imaging, achieving 25 ps time resolution and low power consumption, enhancing the timing accuracy of gamma photon detection.
Contribution
It introduces a Vernier oscillator-based TDC architecture with high resolution and low power, optimized for PET systems.
Findings
Achieved 25 ps time resolution with the proposed TDC.
Demonstrated low power consumption of 1.62681 mW at 1V.
Validated TDC performance through detailed simulations.
Abstract
Positron emission tomography (PET) is a medical imaging method based on the measurement of concentrations of positron-emitting radionuclides in a living body. In the PET imaging system, glucose is labeled with a positron-emitting radionuclide and injected intravenously. Then, the positrons move through the tissue and collide with the electrons of the cells in which they interact. As a result of this interaction, two gamma rays are emitted in the opposite direction. Gama rays emitted from cancerous tissue that has retained radioactive glucose are detected through ring-shaped detectors. And the detected signals are converted into an electrical response. Subsequently, these responses are sampled with electronic circuits and recorded as histogram matrix to generate the image set. The gamma rays may not reach the detectors located in the opposite position in equal time. In PETs having TOF…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Analog and Mixed-Signal Circuit Design
