Needs, trends, and advances in scintillators for radiographic imaging and tomography
Zhehui Wang, Christophe Dujardin, Matthew S. Freeman, Amanda E., Gehring, James F. Hunter, Paul Lecoq, Wei Liu, Charles L. Melcher, C. L., Morris, Martin Nikl, Ghanshyam Pilania, Reeju Pokharel, Daniel G. Robertson,, Daniel J. Rutstrom, Sky K. Sjue, Anton S. Tremsin

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in scintillator materials and technologies for various radiographic imaging and tomography applications, highlighting new trends, materials, and future opportunities in the field.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of over 160 scintillator types, recent innovations like heterostructures and nanoscintillators, and discusses emerging trends and future directions in RadIT.
Findings
Over 160 scintillator types and applications discussed.
Emerging trends include heterostructures and nanoscintillators.
Opportunities for dose reduction and multimodal imaging identified.
Abstract
Scintillators are important materials for radiographic imaging and tomography (RadIT), when ionizing radiations are used to reveal internal structures of materials. Since its invention by R\"ontgen, RadIT now come in many modalities such as absorption-based X-ray radiography, phase contrast X-ray imaging, coherent X-ray diffractive imaging, high-energy X- and ray radiography at above 1 MeV, X-ray computed tomography (CT), proton imaging and tomography (IT), neutron IT, positron emission tomography (PET), high-energy electron radiography, muon tomography, etc. Spatial, temporal resolution, sensitivity, and radiation hardness, among others, are common metrics for RadIT performance, which are enabled by, in addition to scintillators, advances in high-luminosity accelerators and high-power lasers, photodetectors especially CMOS pixelated sensor arrays, and lately data science.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Medical Imaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced X-ray and CT Imaging
