journal article Jan 22, 2020

Investigation of a synthetic diamond detector response in kilovoltage photon beams

Medical Physics Vol. 47 No. 3 pp. 1268-1279 · Wiley
Abstract
PurposeAn important characteristic of radiation dosimetry detectors is their energy response which consists of absorbed‐dose and intrinsic energy responses. The former can be characterized using Monte Carlo (MC) simulations, whereas the latter (i.e., detector signal per absorbed dose to detector) is extracted from experimental data. Such a characterization is especially relevant when detectors are used in nonrelative measurements at a beam quality that differs from the calibration beam quality. Having in mind the possible application of synthetic diamond detectors (microDiamond PTW 60019, Freiburg, Germany) for nonrelative dosimetry of low‐energy brachytherapy (BT) beams, we determined their intrinsic and absorbed‐dose energy responses in 25–250 kV beams relative to a 60Co beam, which is usually the reference beam quality for detector calibration in radiotherapy.Material and MethodsThree microDiamond detectors and, for comparison, two silicon diodes (PTW 60017) were calibrated in terms of air‐kerma free in air in six x‐ray beam qualities (from 25 to 250 kV) and in terms of absorbed dose to water in a 60Co beam at the national metrology laboratory in Sweden. The PENELOPE/penEasy MC radiation transport code was used to calculate the absorbed‐dose energy response of the detectors (modeled based on blueprints) relative to air and water depending on calibration conditions. The MC results were used to extract the relative intrinsic energy response of the detectors from the overall energy response. Measurements using an independent setup with a single ophthalmic BEBIG I25.S16 125I BT seed (effective photon energy of 28 keV) were used as a qualitative check of the extracted intrinsic energy response correction factors. Additionally, the impact of the thickness of the active volume as well as the presence of extra‐cameral components on the absorbed‐dose energy response of a microDiamond detector was studied using MC simulations.ResultsThe relative intrinsic energy response of the microDiamond detectors was higher by a factor of 2 in 25 and 50 kV beams compared to the 60Co beam. The variation in the relative intrinsic energy response of silicon diodes was within 10% over the investigated photon energy range. The use of relative intrinsic energy response correction factors improved the agreement among the absorbed dose to water values determined using microDiamond detectors and silicon diodes, as well as with the TG‐43 formalism‐based calculations for the 125I seed. MC study of microDiamond detector design features provided a possible explanation for inter‐detector response variation at low‐energy photon beams by differences in the effective thickness of the active volume.ConclusionsMicroDiamond detectors had a non‐negligible variation in the relative intrinsic energy response (factor of 2) which was comparable to that in the absorbed‐dose energy response relative to water at low‐energy photon beams. Silicon diodes, in contrast, had an absorbed‐dose energy dependence on photon energy that varied by a factor of 6, whereas the intrinsic energy dependence on beam quality was within 10%. It is important to decouple these two responses for a full characterization of detector energy response especially when the user and reference beam qualities differ significantly, and MC alone is not enough.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
43
[15]
AndreoP BurnsDT HohlfeldK et al. "Absorbed dose determination in external beam radiotherapy: An international Code of Practice for dosimetry based on standards of absorbed dose to water " Technical Reports Series No. 398 International Atomic Energy Agency Vienna Austria 2000.
[22]
KesslerC BurnsDT. "Measuring conditions and unceratinties for the comparison and calibration of national dosimetric standards at the BIPM" Rapport BIPM‐2018/06 2018.
[24]
Salvat F (2014)
[27]
HubbellJH SeltzerSM.Tables of X‐ray mass attenuation coefficients and mass energy‐absorption coefficients from 1 keV to 20 MeV for elements Z = 1 to 92 and 48 additional substances of dosimetric interest (version 1.4) (2004). [Online]http://www.nist.gov/pml/data/xraycoef/. Accessed January 15 2019.Gaithersburg MD:National Institute of Standards and Technology.
[30]
JCGM. "Evaluation of measurement data—guide to the expression of uncertainty in measurement (GUM) " BIPM 100: 2008 Sévres‐BIPM Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology WG1.2008.