Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5498919 | Radiation Measurements | 2017 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Dental ceramics are radiation sensitive materials and exhibit luminescent properties. Their samples can be potentially used for individual dose assessment in situations where retrospective dosimetry is required. In this work, we investigated dosimetry properties of two leucite glass-based dental ceramics using Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) and Thermoluminescence (TL). We concentrated on characteristics as reproducibility, fading, optical bleaching, minimum detectable dose (MDD), dose response and photon energy response of TL and OSL signals. Both the dental ceramics exhibited very good reproducibility (<5% at 2Ï level) when irradiated and measured repeatedly. Their luminescence response was found to be linear for a wide range of doses up to 8.5Â Gy. The MDD values for the samples investigated were a few mGy. The ceramics are not tissue equivalent materials, and their luminescent signals measured were strongly dependent on incident photon energy. Because of fading and optical bleaching the OSL and TL signals were not stable in time. Especially optical bleaching represents a main limiting factor for dose reconstruction. However, one of the ceramics provided a relatively resistant high temperature TL peak for dosimetry.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
Daniela Ekendahl, Libor Judas,