Spectra of linear energy transfer and other dosimetry characteristics as measured in C290 MeV/n MONO and SOBP ion beams at HIMAC-BIO (NIRS, Japan) with different detectors
Language English Country Great Britain, England Media print-electronic
Document type Comparative Study, Evaluation Study, Journal Article
PubMed
21245064
DOI
10.1093/rpd/ncq532
PII: ncq532
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Equipment Failure Analysis MeSH
- Particle Accelerators instrumentation MeSH
- Equipment Design MeSH
- Linear Energy Transfer * MeSH
- Radiometry instrumentation MeSH
- Heavy Ion Radiotherapy * MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Evaluation Study MeSH
- Comparative Study MeSH
- Geographicals
- Japan MeSH
Active mobile dosimetry unit (Liulin), passive plastic nuclear track detectors (PNTD) and thermoluminescent detectors (TLD) were exposed in a C290 MeV/n beam at HIMAC-BIO (NIRS, Japan). Two different types of beam configuration were used--monoenergetic beam (MONO) and spread-out Bragg peak (SOBP); the detectors were placed at several depths from the entrance up to the depths behind the Bragg peak. Relative response of TLDs in beams has been studied as a function of the depth, and it was re-proved that it can depend on the linear energy transfer (LET). Liulin measures energy deposition in Si; the spectra of energy deposited in Si can be transformed to the spectra of lineal energy or LET. PNTDs are able to determine the LET of registered particles directly. The limitation of both methods is in the range in which they can determine the LET-Liulin is able to measure perpendicularly incident charged particles up to ∼35 keV/µm (in water), PNTD can measure from ∼7 to 400 keV/µm, independently of the registration angle. The results from both methods are compared and combined for both beams' configuration, and a good agreement is observed.
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