Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8252589 | Radiation Physics and Chemistry | 2015 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The capability of radioluminescence (RL) dosimeters composed of carbon-doped aluminium oxide (Al2O3:C) detectors+optical fibre has been verified for absorbed dose-rate measurements during carbon radiotherapy. The RL signals from two separate Al2O3:C detectors (single crystal 'CG' and droplet 'P1') have been systematically measured and compared along the Bragg-curve and Spread-Out Bragg-Peak of 290Â MeV/n carbon beams in the water. The absorbed dose response was assessed for the range of 0.5-10Â Gy. For doses up to 6Â Gy, we observed a linear response for both types of detectors, while for higher doses CG presented a more prominent supraliearity than P1. The RL response for low-LET protons in the entrance from the curve was found to closely resemble that observed for a clinical 6Â MV X-ray beam, while it was found that P1 has a better agreement with the reference data from standard ionization chamber than CG. We observed a significant decrease in luminescence efficiency with LET in the Bragg peak region. The Al2O3:C RL luminescence efficiency differs from Al2O3:C OSL results, which implies that the signal can be corrected for LET dependency to match the correct SOBP and Bragg Peak.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
L.F. Nascimento, F. Vanhavere, S. Kodaira, H. Kitamura, D. Verellen, Y. De Deene,