| Literature DB >> 33597760 |
Xiangyu Ou1, Xian Qin2, Bolong Huang3, Jie Zan1, Qinxia Wu1, Zhongzhu Hong1, Lili Xie1, Hongyu Bian2, Zhigao Yi2, Xiaofeng Chen1, Yiming Wu2, Xiaorong Song1, Juan Li1, Qiushui Chen4,5, Huanghao Yang6,7, Xiaogang Liu8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Current X-ray imaging technologies involving flat-panel detectors have difficulty in imaging three-dimensional objects because fabrication of large-area, flexible, silicon-based photodetectors on highly curved surfaces remains a challenge1-3. Here we demonstrate ultralong-lived X-ray trapping for flat-panel-free, high-resolution, three-dimensional imaging using a series of solution-processable, lanthanide-doped nanoscintillators. Corroborated by quantum mechanical simulations of defect formation and electronic structures, our experimental characterizations reveal that slow hopping of trapped electrons due to radiation-triggered anionic migration in host lattices can induce more than 30 days of persistent radioluminescence. We further demonstrate X-ray luminescence extension imaging with resolution greater than 20 line pairs per millimetre and optical memory longer than 15 days. These findings provide insight into mechanisms underlying X-ray energy conversion through enduring electron trapping and offer a paradigm to motivate future research in wearable X-ray detectors for patient-centred radiography and mammography, imaging-guided therapeutics, high-energy physics and deep learning in radiology.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33597760 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03251-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962