Abstract

In medical dosimetry, the radiation quantity of interest is frequently the dose to tissue. To make direct dosimeters that show the dose absorbed in soft tissue, tissue-equivalent material is preferred. Plastic scintillators (PLSs) are made of materials with a density similar to soft tissue and relatively have energy independent response. Non-proportionality must be taken into account when reproducing the light output spectrum for photons below 200 keV, as it reduces light output significantly. In comparison to a standard PLS, both low and high-energy photons’ pulse height distribution spectra as a result of lead doping were measured and calculated. The effect of a 0.5% lead doping scintillator is sufficient to make up for the loss or difference between soft tissues and PLSs in response to low-energy photons, particularly below 200 keV.

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