Abstract

Measurement of dose delivery is essential to guarantee the safety of patients undergoing medical radiation imaging or treatment procedures. This study aimed to evaluate the ability of organic semiconductors, coupled with a plastic scintillator, to measure photon dose in clinically relevant conditions, and establish its radiation hardness. Thereby, proving organic devices are capable of being a water-equivalent, mechanically flexible, real-time dosimeter. The shelf-life of an organic photodiode was analyzed to 40kGy by comparison of the charge-collection-efficiency of a 520nm light emitting diode. A non-irradiated and pre-irradiated photodiode was coupled to a plastic scintillator and their response to 6 MV photons was investigated. The dose linearity, dose-per-pulse dependence and energy dependence was characterized. Finally, the percentage depth dose (PDD) between 0.5 and 20cm was compared with ionization chamber measurements. Sensitivity to 6 MV photons was (190±0.28) pC/cGy and (170±0.11) pC/cGy for the non-irradiated and pre-irradiated photodiode biased at -2 V. The response was independent of the dose-per-pulse between 0.031 and 0.34mGy/pulse. An energy dependence was found for low keV energies, explained by the energy dependence of the scintillator which plateaued between 70keV and 1.2MeV. The PDD was within ±3% of the ionization chamber. Coupling an organic photodiode with a plastic scintillator provided reliable measurement of a range of photon energies. Dose-per-pulse and energy independence advocate their use as a dosimeter, specifically image-guided treatment without beam-quality correction factors. Degradation effects of organic semiconducting materials deteriorate sensor response but can be stabilized.

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