New model for explaining the over-response phenomenon in percentage of depth dose curve measured using inorganic scintillating materials for optical fiber radiation sensors
posted on 2020-02-17, 15:46authored byZhuang Qin, Tianci Xie, Xinyu Dai, Bin Zhang, Yu Ma, Ihsan Ullah Khan, Xu Zhang, Haopeng Li, Yongji Yan, Wenhui Zhao, Song Li, Ziyin Chen, Daxin Zhang, Jun Xu, Xiaokang Hu, LIna Xing, Kun Feng, Elfed LewisElfed Lewis, Weimin Sun
.Inorganic scintillating material used in optical fibre sensors (OFS) when used as
dosimeters for measuring percentage depth dose (PDD) characteristics have exhibited
significant differences when compared to those measured using an ionization chamber (IC),
which is the clinical gold standard for quality assurance (QA) assessments. The percentage
difference between the two measurements is as high as 16.5% for a 10 × 10 cm2 field at 10
cm depth below the surface. Two reasons have been suggested for this: the presence of an
energy effect and Cerenkov radiation. These two factors are analysed in detail and evaluated
quantitatively. It is established that the influence of the energy effect is only a maximum of
2.5% difference for a beam size 10 × 10 cm2 compared with the measured ionization chamber
values. And the influence of the Cerenkov radiation is less than 0.14% in an inorganic
scintillating material in the case of OFS when using Gd2O2S:Tb as the luminescent material.
Therefore, there must be other mechanisms leading to over-response. The luminescence
mechanism of inorganic scintillating material is theoretically analysed and a new model is
proposed and validated that helps explain the over-response phenomenon
History
Publication
Optics Express;27 (17)
Publisher
Optical Society of America
Note
peer-reviewed
Other Funding information
Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang, Natural Science Foundation of China