Abstract

We have developed a current-mode detector system, called a “transXend” detector, consisting of several segmented detectors aligned along the direction of X-ray incidence, for energy-resolved computed tomography (CT). The transXend detector measures X-rays as electric currents and after analysis gives the energy spectrum of the incident X-ray. In previous work, we measured the linear attenuation coefficients of resins as a function of X-ray energy with the energy-resolved CT using the transXend detector. This paper shows a method to estimate the effective atomic number and electron density of nine resins from the linear attenuation coefficients using a photon–atom cross-section lookup table. The estimated and agreed well with calibration lines with accuracies of about 2%.

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