Abstract

The purpose of this study is to characterize dosimetric properties of thin film photovoltaic sensors as a platform for development of prototype dose verification equipment in radiotherapy. Towards this goal, flexible thin‐film sensors of dose with embedded data acquisition electronics and wireless data transmission are prototyped and tested in kV and MV photon beams. Fundamental dosimetric properties are determined in view of a specific application to dose verification in multiple planes or curved surfaces inside a phantom. Uniqueness of the new thin‐film sensors consists in their mechanical properties, low‐power operation, and low‐cost. They are thinner and more flexible than dosimetric films. In principle, each thin‐film sensor can be fabricated in any size (mm2 – cm2 areas) and shape. Individual sensors can be put together in an array of sensors spreading over large areas and yet being light. Photovoltaic mode of charge collection (of electrons and holes) does not require external electric field applied to the sensor, and this implies simplicity of data acquisition electronics and low power operation. The prototype device use for testing consists of several thin film dose sensors, each of about 1.5 cm×5 cm area, connected to simple readout electronics. Sensitivity of the sensors is determined per unit area and compared to EPID sensitivity, as well as other standard photodiodes. Each sensor independently measures dose and is based on commercially available flexible thin‐film aSi photodiodes. Readout electronics consists of an ultra low‐power microcontroller, radio frequency transmitter, and a low‐noise amplification circuit implemented on a flexible printed circuit board. Detector output is digitized and transmitted wirelessly to an external host computer where it is integrated and processed. A megavoltage medical linear accelerator (Varian Tx) equipped with kilovoltage online imaging system and a Cobalt source are use to irradiate different thin‐film detector sensors in a Solid Water phantom under various irradiation conditions. Different factors are considered in characterization of the device attributes: energies (80 kVp, 130 kVp, 6 MV, 15 MV), dose rates (different ms × mA, 100–600 MU/min), total doses (0.1 cGy‐500 cGy), depths (0.5 cm–20 cm), irradiation angles with respect to the detector surface (0°‐180°), and IMRT tests (closed MLC, sweeping gap). The detector response to MV radiation is both linear with total dose (~1‐400 cGy) and independent of dose rate (100‐600 Mu/min). The sensitivity per unit area of thin‐film sensors is lower than for aSi flat‐panel detectors, but sufficient to acquire stable and accurate signals during irradiations. The proposed thin‐film photodiode system has properties which make it promising for clinical dosimetry. Due to the mechanical flexibility of each sensor and readout electronics, low‐cost, and wireless data acquisition, it could be considered for quality assurance (e.g., IMRT, mechanical linac QA), as well as real‐time dose monitoring in challenging setup configurations, including large area and 3D detection (multiple planes or curved surfaces).PACS number: 87.56.Fc

Highlights

  • Detection of ionizing radiation is essential in radiation protection, quality assurance (QA) and in medical applications involving imaging of anatomy and determination of dose distribution

  • A small increase of R(m)/m for m =1,2 for the ion chamber may be attributed to higher linac output rather than ionization chamber response

  • The flexible thin-film system described in this work is promising as a platform for prototyping quality assurance devices in radiotherapy

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Summary

Introduction

Detection of ionizing radiation is essential in radiation protection, quality assurance (QA) and in medical applications involving imaging of anatomy and determination of dose distribution In the latter cases, detection of ionizing radiation is typically accomplished with high-resolution flat-panel arrays,(1-4) low-resolution ionization chamber/diode arrays,(5-7) and intensifying screen/ film systems.[8,9] Radiographic films or self-developing films, such as GAFCHROMIC films, are flexible and can be cut to fit various geometries and are relatively inexpensive. Detection of ionizing radiation is typically accomplished with high-resolution flat-panel arrays,(1-4) low-resolution ionization chamber/diode arrays,(5-7) and intensifying screen/ film systems.[8,9] Radiographic films or self-developing films, such as GAFCHROMIC films, are flexible and can be cut to fit various geometries and are relatively inexpensive They require postirradiation scanning and repeated calibrations and, in some cases, chemical processing, which significantly increases the overall cost of film dosimetry. The primary motivation of this study is the need for flexible arrays of thin-film sensors as applied to radiotherapy dose verification in phantoms in multiple planes or curved surfaces

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