Patent Number: 060318937
Section: summary

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention The present invention is directed to a stray radiation grid, particularly for a medical X-ray apparatus of the type composed of a carrier material with absorption elements, particularly in the form of lead lamellae, that are arranged in rows spaced from one another and proceeding essentially parallel to one another, whereby the spacing between the rows of absorption elements is larger in the region of the edges of the grid than in the middle region. 2. Description of the Prior Art Stray radiation grids are employed in X-ray diagnostics for the suppression of stray radiation. The effectiveness of such a grid is particularly characterized by the line density (in lines per centimeter) and by its geometry, i.e. the ratio of height and thickness of the intermediate medium. This ratio is called the shaft ratio. In order to avoid a higher occlusion by the absorption elements, i.e., for example, the lead lamellae, in the outside regions than in the center, the grids are fashioned such that the absorption elements are aligned to the focus of the radiator, i.e. are "focussed". The focus spacing is thus a characteristic quantity of such grids. In these known grids, thus, the lead lamellae are arranged tilted. Alternatively, it is also known to conically erode the finished grid at one side, proceeding from the middle, and thus to modify the geometry. The known grids are composed of a carrier usually composed of paper; the absorption elements are usually lead lamellae. A disadvantage of the known embodiments is, for the first version described above, the manufacture thereof, since the lead lamellae arranged focussed, i.e. residing obliquely, must be brought into this focussing alignment in a complicated and extremely precise way. In the case of the slanted grid, the post-processing during manufacture is extremely involved. A stray radiation grid of the above-described type is described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,951,305. Given this grid, the spacing of the absorption elements of the respective grid or plane varies such that it is smaller in the middle of the grid than at the edge regions. A disadvantage, however, is that the grid exhibits a different absorption behavior over its area or surface caused by the increasing spacing of the absorption elements. SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION An object of the present invention is to provide a stray radiation grid with optimally uniform absorption behavior. This object is inventively achieved in a stray radiation grid of the type initially described, but wherein the width of the absorption elements is larger (thicker) in the region of the edges of the grid than in the middle. The grid thus departs from the extremely complicated tilting of the absorption elements, or beveling thereof, both of these techniques maintaining same spacing of the absorption elements. On the contrary, the absorption elements in the inventive stray radiation grid are seated closer to one another in the middle region than in the outer edge region, so that the shaft ratio is approximately balanced as a result, due to the oblique incidence of the image-active beam. A shaft ratio that is virtually constant over the entire grid is expediently achieved when the spacing from row to row increases continuously toward the edge proceeding from the middle of the grid. Since the absorption behavior changes with increasing spacing of the absorption elements from one another, it is inventively provided for compensation that the width of the absorption elements is larger in the region of the edges of the grid than in the middle, with the per element width increasing continuously toward the edges proceeding from the middle. On the basis of this measure, it is possible to realize a largely uniform absorption behavior over the entire grid width. The respective widths are thereby inventively selected such that they increase essentially proportionally to the increasing row spacing, i.e. such that the lead content per length unit remains constant over the entire grid width. In a further embodiment of the inventive grid, by contrast, the width increases sub-proportionately to the increasing row spacing. This inventive embodiment makes it possible to take the imaging radiation and the stray radiation which decrease toward the edge of an extensive grid (due to the distance square law), into consideration, so that a largely uniform absorption behavior is also established in the critical edge regions. Moreover, this embodiment allows the grid to be adapted to the decreasing dose rate in the beam cone, which decreases toward the edges. It is especially expedient, given an absorption property adapted to the actual conditions and given a constant setting of the shaft ratio, when the respective spacings between the absorption elements and/or the width of the absorption elements are inventively selected dependent on the local incident angle of the radiation, particularly X-ray radiation, in order to achieve a complete focussing with reference to the spacing from the radiation source. Compared to the continuous increase in spacing, in an alternative embodiment of the invention the grid, proceeding from the middle, has a number of regions within which the spacings between the rows of absorption elements are respectively constant, but the row spacing increases from region to region proceeding from the middle. This stray radiation grid is thus inventively constructed of separate segments that are respectively constant in terms of spacing; the spacing, however, the spacing increases from segment to segment. A precise focussing given substantial constancy of the shaft ratio can also be achieved with this inventive embodiment. Given this grid constructed of segments, the absorption elements are also thicker in the edge region than in middle. The width of the absorption elements can be essentially constant within a region, but can increase from region to region proceeding from the middle, as is also the case in the first embodiment of the invention. Here, too, there is the possibility for the width to increase essentially proportionately to the increasing spacing or, particularly given extensive grids, the width can increase subproportionately to the increasing spacing in order to adapt to the imaging radiation and the stray radiation decreasing at the edge side. Here, too, the spacing and/or width within the regions can be selected dependent on the incident angle of the radiation, particularly X-ray radiation, for a further improvement of the focussing.