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The first positron computed tomography system with cesium fluoride scintillation detectors, PETT VI, has been developed. The system provides 7 slice images with 4 detector rings (57 cm). Performances of the system are discussed and clarified based on experimental data. Adoption of CsF detectors decrease the random coincidence rate by achieving a short coincidence timing resolution. The timing resolution of a pair of detector heads is 1.5 nsec FWHM and 3.0 nsec FWTM. After a preliminary timing alignment of 288 detectors, the coincidence window width (2τ) of 11 nsec or wiider has yielded maximum coincidence sensitivity, and operation at 5.9 nsec has given 91% of maximum. The full sensitivity for a cyclindrical uniform phantom (20 cm dia × 13 cm) is 354 kcps/microCi/cc/7 slices in a low resolution mode (intrinsic resolution at center is 11.7 mm FWHM). In a high resolution mode (7.1 mm), it is 31% of the full sensitivity. Coincidence rates ratio, random/(true + scattered), in the low resolution mode, is 0.16 α with 5.9 nsec window width inside the phantom images reconstructed without a random correction, where α is activity density (microCi/cc). The ratio is 1/3 of that obtained when operating at 20 nsec. Scattered coincidence fraction at the center of the phantom images, without the random correction process, is 9% of the true + scattered.
Yamamoto et al. (Mon,) studied this question.