DocumentCode
6891
Title
Characterization of an Innovative p-type Epitaxial Diode for Dosimetry in Modern External Beam Radiotherapy
Author
Aldosari, A.H. ; Espinoza, Angelina ; Robinson, Doug ; Fuduli, I. ; Porumb, Cosmin ; Alshaikh, S. ; Carolan, M. ; Lerch, Michael L. F. ; Perevertaylo, V. ; Rosenfeld, Anatoly B. ; Petasecca, Marco
Author_Institution
Centre for Med. Radiat. Phys., Univ. of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia
Volume
60
Issue
6
fYear
2013
fDate
Dec. 2013
Firstpage
4705
Lastpage
4712
Abstract
Due to the ever-increasing complexity of treatment modalities in radiation therapy, there has been a greater need for detectors to perform quality assurance to ensure patients are treated correctly and safely. Modern radiation therapy techniques involve small field sizes, high dose gradients, and varying intensity of energy and rate. The ideal dosimeter for this treatment should display high spatial resolution, high linearity, accuracy, and radiation hardness. Silicon detectors have been widely used for radiotherapy measurements and have many attractive qualities as a dosimeter; weaknesses of silicon detectors are, however, decreases in sensitivity with accumulated dose. The Centre for Medical Radiation Physics has developed a new technology with an unusual charge collection efficiency variation with accumulated dose which stabilizes the response of the detector within ±5% after 120 kGy photon irradiation. The sensor has been also characterized by irradiation by an 18 MV medical LINAC with sensitivity to a photoneutron-induced damage of less than 0.5%/100 Gy. The radiation damage mechanism has been validated by TCAD simulations which confirmed the mechanism behind the CCE increase as a function of the accumulated dose.
Keywords
dosimeters; dosimetry; quality assurance; radiation therapy; silicon radiation detectors; Centre for Medical Radiation Physics; TCAD simulations; charge collection efficiency variation; dosimeter; dosimetry; external beam radiotherapy; high dose gradients; high linearity; high spatial resolution; medical LINAC; p-type epitaxial diode; patients; photon irradiation; photoneutron-induced damage; quality assurance; radiation damage mechanism; radiation hardness; radiation therapy techniques; radiotherapy measurements; silicon detectors; small field sizes; treatment modalities; voltage 18 MV; Epitaxial growth; Photonics; Radiation effects; Semiconductor process modeling; Silicon; Substrates; Radiation damage; TCAD simulation; radiotherapy dosimetry; silicon (Si) detector;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.2013.2289909
Filename
6678239
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