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Low-dose real-time X-ray imaging with nontoxic double perovskite scintillators

Physics

Low-dose real-time X-ray imaging with nontoxic double perovskite scintillators

W. Zhu, W. Ma, et al.

Explore the exciting advancements in X-ray imaging with innovative nontoxic double-perovskite scintillators, demonstrated by researchers Wenjuan Zhu, Wenbo Ma, Yirong Su, and others. These materials optimize absorption and emission efficiency, achieving impressive results such as a light yield surpassing CsPbBr₃, all while minimizing self-absorption. Uncover the potential for stable and high-performance imaging at low doses, even after exposure to thermal and X-ray irradiation.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
X-rays are widely used in probing inside information nondestructively, enabling broad applications in the medical radiography and electronic industries. X-ray imaging based on emerging lead halide perovskite scintillators has received extensive attention recently. However, the strong self-absorption, relatively low light yield and lead toxicity of these perovskites restrict their practical applications. Here, we report a series of nontoxic double-perovskite scintillators of Cs₂Ag₀.₆Na₀.₄In₁₋ₓBiₓCl₆. By controlling the content of the heavy atom Bi³⁺, the X-ray absorption coefficient, radiative emission efficiency, light yield and light decay were manipulated to maximise the scintillator performance. A light yield of up to 39,000 ± 7000 photons/MeV for Cs₂Ag₀.₆Na₀.₄In₀.₈₅Bi₀.₁₅Cl₆ was obtained, which is much higher than that for the previously reported lead halide perovskite colloidal CsPbBr₃ (21,000 photons/MeV). The large Stokes shift between the radioluminescence (RL) and absorption spectra benefiting from self-trapped excitons (STEs) led to a negligible self-absorption effect. Given the high light output and fast light decay of this scintillator, static X-ray imaging was attained under an extremely low dose of ~1 µGyₐᵢᵣ, and dynamic X-ray imaging of finger bending without a ghosting effect was demonstrated under a low-dose rate of 47.2 µGyₐᵢᵣ s⁻¹. After thermal treatment at 85 °C for 50 h followed by X-ray irradiation for 50 h in ambient air, the scintillator performance in terms of the RL intensity and X-ray image quality remained almost unchanged. Our results shed light on exploring highly competitive scintillators beyond the scope of lead halide perovskites, not only for avoiding toxicity but also for better performance.
Publisher
Light: Science & Applications
Published On
Oct 26, 2020
Authors
Wenjuan Zhu, Wenbo Ma, Yirong Su, Zeng Chen, Xinya Chen, Yaoguang Ma, Lizhong Bai, Wenge Xiao, Tianyu Liu, Haiming Zhu, Xiaofeng Liu, Huafeng Liu, Xu Liu, Yang (Michael) Yang
Tags
X-ray imaging
double-perovskite
scintillators
light yield
Bi³⁺
self-absorption
nontoxic
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