4D imaging and 4D radiation therapy promise radical improvements in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer. These techniques study, characterize, and reduce the effects of patient movement during imaging and radiotherapy, adding the dimension of time to 3D body-scanning technology such as computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and advanced ultrasound systems. By visually freezing a 3D model or by showing an animated 3D image, 4D imaging techniques make it easier for clinicians to identify targets and focus treatment on tumors, reducing the impact of radiation therapy or surgery on surrounding tissue.
An important aspect of 4D medical processing is compensating for patient motion, a vital consideration in radiotherapy. A radiation source must be focused on a tumor even if there is a sudden movement that might otherwise expose normal tissue to the treatment. Even shallow breathing can cause the radiation source to miss its tiny target and irradiate surrounding tissue, increasing the risk of damaging side effects from the treatment.
As a result, an increasingly important part of 4D imaging-based radiotherapy systems is the motorized assembly that directs the treatment head. Driven by the analysis performed by the analysis system, highresolution motors can ensure that the radiation is always directed towards the tumor and nowhere else. Such high-resolution motor control demands very high performance from software running on DSPs or microprocessors. It is not just computationally intensive but the high interrupt frequency needed to continually check on motor position incurs a high overhead.
FPGAs provide a more efficient way of implementing highly responsive motor-control algorithms. By keeping loop times low through the use of hardware rather than software control, FPGA implementation improves interrupt latencies and provides finer-grained control over motor position, ensuring that a radiation source can compensate for patient motion accurately. In the case of SmartFusion devices, hardware responsiveness can be combined with fine-tuning through software running on an industrystandard ARM® Cortex™-M3 processor. Integrated analog I/O blocks under the control of an analog compute engine (ACE) implemented in hardware ensures that the motor actuators are updated with the correct information without delay.
Not all FPGAs are suited to use in radiotherapy. The SRAM cells in many FPGAs are highly susceptible to radiation, particularly single-event errors in which alpha and neutron radiation causes loss of configuration data. Programmable logic devices based on SRAM technology, for example, are susceptible to soft errors and firm errors. A soft error is the transient corruption of a single bit of data, and a firm error is the loss of the underlying FPGA configuration, which can cause system-level functional failure. However, neutron and alpha radiation do not have adverse effects on true nonvolatile flash-based FPGAs at ground and sea levels or at high altitudes, making them far more suitable for medical applications. Failure cannot be tolerated in medical applications, but radiation levels in the system are likely to be higher than in the general environment.
Proprietary algorithms provide the basis for effective 4D imaging. Microsemi’s flash-based FPGAs have a further benefit over SRAM-based products: design security. Once programmed, it is not possible to decode the configuration bitstream that was used. In contrast, SRAM-based FPGAs always have to read in their configuration data at boot time, potentially revealing key design information to someone attempting to reverse-engineer the design.
Numero di parte | Descrizione | |
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ARF475FL Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, RF PWR MOSFET 500V 10A | RFQ |
ARF468BG Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, RF MOSFET (VDMOS) | RFQ |
ARF468AG Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, RF MOSFET (VDMOS) | RFQ |
ARF460BG Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, FET RF N-CH 500V 14A TO247 | RFQ |
ARF460AG Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, FET RF N-CH 500V 14A TO247 | RFQ |
ARF477FL Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, RF PWR MOSFET 500V 10A | RFQ |
ARF476FL Microsemi Corporation |
Transistor - FET, MOSFET - RF, RF FET N CH 500V 10A PSH PUL PR | RFQ |
A3P600-FG256I Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 177 I/O 256FBGA | RFQ |
APA150-TQG100I Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 66 I/O 100TQFP | RFQ |
A42MX09-PQG100 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 83 I/O 100QFP | RFQ |
A42MX09-PLG84 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 72 I/O 84PLCC | RFQ |
APA150-TQG100 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 66 I/O 100TQFP | RFQ |
A3P1000-PQ208 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 154 I/O 208QFP | RFQ |
A3P1000-PQG208 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 154 I/O 208QFP | RFQ |
A40MX04-PLG68 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 57 I/O 68PLCC | RFQ |
A40MX04-PLG44 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 34 I/O 44PLCC | RFQ |
A3P600-PQG208 Microsemi Corporation |
Embedded - FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array), IC FPGA 154 I/O 208QFP | RFQ |
Traction inverters are the main battery drain components in electric vehicles (EVs), with power levels up to 150kW or higher. The efficiency and performance of traction inverter directly affect the driving range of electric vehicle after a single charge. Therefore, in order to build the next generation of traction inverter systems, silicon carbide (SiC) field effect transistor (FET) is widely used in the industry to achieve higher reliability, efficiency and power density.
Do you know the 8 application circuits of operational amplifiers?
This technical presentation requires an understanding of how to configure an operational amplifier in a typical gain control circuit. The applications of linear and nonlinear digital potentiometers are discussed. This article gives an overview of the basic techniques required to convert audio and other potentiometer/op amp applications from conventional mechanical potentiometers to solid state potentiometers
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How to achieve precise motion control in industrial actuators
The NCP51820 is a 650 V, high-speed, half-bridge driver capable of driving gallium nitride (" GaN ") power switches at dV/dt rates up to 200 V/ns. The full performance advantages of high voltage, high frequency and fast dV/dt edge rate switches can only be realized if the printed circuit board (PCB) can be properly designed to support this power switch. This paper will briefly introduce NCP51820 and the key points of PCB design of high performance GaN half bridge grid driver circuit using NCP51820