Abstract

To characterize the dose-response, energy dependence, postexposure changes, orientation dependence, and spatial capabilities of LD-V1, a new low-dose Gafchromic film for low-energy x-ray dosimetry. A single sheet of LD-V1 Gafchromic film was cut into 15 × 20mm2 rectangles with a notch to track orientation. Eight different doses between 5 and 320mGy were delivered by an MXR-160/22 x-ray tube using x-ray beams of 90, 100, and 120kVp filtered with 3mm of Al and 2mm of Ti. The 120kVp films were scanned at 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 12, 24, 48, 72, and 168h postexposure in portrait orientation and additionally scanned in landscape orientation at 24h. The 90 and 100kVp films were scanned at 24h postexposure in portrait orientation. Lastly, a 20 × 200mm2 strip of film was irradiated using a thin-slit imaging collimator and scanned 24h postexposure to test the film performance in an x-ray imaging application. Of the three color channels, the red channel was found to produce a dose-response curve with a large range of net optical density (netOD) values across the considered dose range. A prominent energy dependence was discovered, resulting in dose discrepancies on the scale of 17mGy between 90 and 120kVp for a dose of 80mGy. The measured postexposure changes suggest that the calibration irradiation-to-scan time should be longer than 12h with a±4h scanning time window for dose errors of<0.5%. An average dose difference of 3.4% was found between the two scanning orientations. Lastly, noise of 4% was measured in the thin slit collimator film for a dose of 30mGy. We have characterized the LD-V1 film for low-energy, low-dose x-ray dosimetry. Energy, scan-time, and orientation dependencies should be considered when using this film.

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