Abstract

The MoniDiam project is part of the French national collaboration CLaRyS (Contrôle en Ligne de l’hAdronthérapie par RaYonnements Secondaires) for on-line monitoring of hadron therapy. It relies on the imaging of nuclear reaction products that is related to the ion range. The goal here is to provide large area beam detectors with a high detection efficiency for carbon or proton beams giving time and position measurement at 100 MHz count rates (beam tagging hodoscope). High radiation hardness and intrinsic electronic properties make diamonds reliable and very fast detectors with a good signal to noise ratio. Commercial Chemical Vapor Deposited (CVD) poly-crystalline, heteroepitaxial and monocrystalline diamonds were studied. Their applicability as a particle detector was investigated using α and β radioactive sources, 95 MeV/u carbon ion beams at GANIL and 8.5 keV X-ray photon bunches from ESRF. This facility offers the unique capability of providing a focused (~1 μm) beam in bunches of 100 ps duration, with an almost uniform energy deposition in the irradiated detector volume, therefore mimicking the interaction of single ions. A signal rise time resolution ranging from 20 to 90 ps rms and an energy resolution of 7 to 9% were measured using diamonds with aluminum disk shaped surface metallization. This enabled us to conclude that polycrystalline CVD diamond detectors are good candidates for our beam tagging hodoscope development. Recently, double-side stripped metallized diamonds were tested using the XBIC (X Rays Beam Induced Current) set-up of the ID21 beamline at ESRF which permits us to evaluate the capability of diamond to be used as position sensitive detector. The final detector will consist in a mosaic arrangement of double-side stripped diamond sensors read out by a dedicated fast-integrated electronics of several hundreds of channels.

Highlights

  • T HE treatment of tumors by a beam of carbon ions or protons is an alternative cancer therapy known as hadronManuscript written July, 2017

  • We report on the charge collection properties of Chemical Vapor Deposited (CVD) diamonds [23] with disk-shaped metallized sensors (Fig. 2). 1) Pulse shape analysis

  • Large-area, synthetic pCVD or DOI diamond detectors are foreseen for on-line hadron therapy beam tagging applications

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Summary

Introduction

T HE treatment of tumors by a beam of carbon ions or protons is an alternative cancer therapy known as hadron. Yamouni are with Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie, CNRS/IN2P3, Université Grenoble-Alpes, M. Testa are with IPNL, Université de Lyon, Université Lyon 1, CNRS/IN2P3, UMR 5822, France, W. Motte are with the Neel Institute, Université Grenoble-Alpes and CNRS UPR2940, Grenoble, France

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