Abstract

We developed a novel, accurate and robust energy calibration algorithm for single X-ray photon counting detectors suitable for the use of high-Z sensor materials. The calibratable energy range was demonstrated to extend over a wide interval from 12 keV up to 150 keV and the same method can also be applied to lower or higher X-ray energies. Fluorescence lines of several elemental targets are used as reference up to 75 keV. For higher energies, the reference is given by direct X-ray tube spectra end-points — extracted with a semi-empirical model independently of the broadening by electronic noise. The pixel-wise threshold trimming relies on a target curve fitting iterative procedure which is able to cope with offset, gain and flat-field variations. The algorithm is highly parallelizable and can profit from modern multi-core machines. The proposed method is able to deal with the spectral complexity introduced by atomic fluorescence effects arising in high-Z sensor materials such as CdTe, CdZnTe and GaAs for energies above the corresponding K-edges and enhanced by a decreasing pixel size. We report the qualification results for the case study of a 1 mm-thick CdTe sensor with 150 μm pixel size, bonded to an IBEX ASIC and calibrated in the range 12–150 keV. The validity of the method was assessed by analyzing calibrated pulse height spectra recorded with Sn and W fluorescence samples and with a 99mTc radioactive source. The global deviation was found to be smaller than 0.5% at 140.5 keV. The residual threshold dispersion was 0.54 keV rms at the Sn Kα peak and 1.71 keV rms at the 99mTc γ-decay peak, still with a limited impact on the overall energy resolution of the system.

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