SU-E-T-168: Development of a Liquid Scintillation Detector for External Beam Dosimetry

Med Phys. 2012 Jun;39(6Part12):3741-3742. doi: 10.1118/1.4735226.

Abstract

Purpose: The goal of this research was to design a liquid scintillation dosimeter that could be used forrelative dosimetry of linear accelerator fields. The project emphasized minimization of cost and ease of use.

Methods: The scintillator that was used in this research was BETAMAX- ES scintillation cocktail from MPBiomedical. This particular scintillator was selected due to its relatively high scintillation yield and lowcost. The entirety of the scintillator used the measurements was supplied free of cost. The housing for the liquid was constructed from PVC and is cylindrical with one tapered end. One fiber of the dual optical fibers transmits the generated photons to the CCD while the other fiber is used for Cerenkovsubtraction.The detector used comes from a Philips SPC880NC webcam. The plastic casing of the webcamwas removed so that only the printed circuit board, USB cable and lens eyepiece holder remained. Thesensor employed is the Sony ICX098QB CCD, which is 3.2mm by 2.4mm and each pixel is 5.6mm by 5.6mm. A small cylindrical insert was manufactured that was inserted into the lens eyepiece holder to get adequate mechanical coupling of the fibers to the CCD face. Images were acquired with a freeware image acquisition tool, SharpCap, and analyzed with theMatlab commercial math package from Mathworks.

Results: Measurements have been performed that show that the detector is able to accurately measuretissue maximum ratio and the relative dose factor. The detector was able to accurately measurephysical wedge factors and made good predictions of the modulation factor for a patient's 7-field IMRT plan.

Conclusions: This work has shown that relative dosimetry can be performed using an inexpensive liquidscintillation detector. This could be expanded to include an array of liquid scintillator cells formeasurement of beam profiles and other more complex problems.

Keywords: Charge coupled devices; Digital image processing; Dosimetry; Image sensors; Linear accelerators; Medical imaging; Optical fibers; Optical sensors; Photons; Scintillation detectors.