Response of diamond detectors in ultra-high dose-per-pulse electron beams for dosimetry at FLASH radiotherapy

With increasing investigation of the so-called FLASH effect, the need for accurate real time dosimetry for ultra-high dose rates is also growing. Considering the ultra-high dose-per-pulse (DPP) necessary to produce the ultra-high dose rates for investigations of the FLASH effect, real time dosimetry...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physics in medicine & biology 2022-03, Vol.67 (7), p.75002
Hauptverfasser: Kranzer, R, Schüller, A, Bourgouin, A, Hackel, T, Poppinga, D, Lapp, M, Looe, H K, Poppe, B
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container_issue 7
container_start_page 75002
container_title Physics in medicine & biology
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creator Kranzer, R
Schüller, A
Bourgouin, A
Hackel, T
Poppinga, D
Lapp, M
Looe, H K
Poppe, B
description With increasing investigation of the so-called FLASH effect, the need for accurate real time dosimetry for ultra-high dose rates is also growing. Considering the ultra-high dose-per-pulse (DPP) necessary to produce the ultra-high dose rates for investigations of the FLASH effect, real time dosimetry is a major challenge. In particular, vented ionization chambers, as used for dosimetry in conventional radiotherapy, show significant deviations from linearity with increasing DPP. This is due to recombination losses in the sensitive air volume. Solid state detectors could be an alternative. Due to their good stability of the response with regard to the accumulated dose, diamond detectors such as the microDiamond could be suitable here. The aims of this work are to investigate the response of microDiamond and adapted microDiamond prototypes in ultra-high DPP electron beams, to understand the underlying effects and to draw conclusions for further detector developments. For the study, an electron beam with a DPP up to 6.5 Gy and a pulse duration of 2.5 s was used to fulfill the conditions under which the FLASH effect was observed. As a dose rate-independent reference, alanine dosimeters were used. It has been shown that the commercially available microDiamond detectors have limitations in terms of linearity at ultra-high DPP. But this is not an intrinsic limitation of the detector principle. The deviations from linearity were correlated with the series resistance and the sensitivity. It could be shown that the linear range can be extended towards ultra-high DPP range by reducing the sensitivity in combination with a low series resistance of the detectors. The work shows that synthetic single crystal diamond detectors working as Schottky photodiodes are in principle suitable for FLASH-RT dosimetry at electron linear accelerators.
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subjects Diamond
dosimetry
Electrons
FLASH radiotherapy
Heart Rate
microDiamond
Radiation Oncology
Radiometry
ultra-high dose-per-pulse
title Response of diamond detectors in ultra-high dose-per-pulse electron beams for dosimetry at FLASH radiotherapy
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