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Friday 29 May 2020

CCC publication: Density Compensated Diodes for Small Field Dosimetry: Comprehensive Testing and Implications for Design

Citation: Physics in medicine and biology. 2020, 65(15), 155011. Online ahead of print (2020 May 11)   
Author: Georgios Georgiou, Sudhir Kumar, Jan Wuerfel, Tracy S A Underwood, James Thompson, Mark A Hill, Carl Graham Rowbottom, John D Fenwick
Abstract: Purpose.In small megavoltage photon fields, the accuracies of an unmodified PTW 60017-type diode dosimeter and six diodes modified by adding airgaps of thickness 0.6-1.6 mm and diameter 3.6 mm have been comprehensively characterized experimentally and computationally. The optimally thick airgap for density compensation was determined, and detectors were micro-CT imaged to investigate differences between experimentally measured radiation responses and those predicted computationally.Methods.Detectors were tested on- and off-axis, at 5 and 15 cm depths in 6 and 15 MV fields ≥0.5x0.5 cm2. Computational studies were carried out using the EGSnrc/BEAMnrc Monte Carlo radiation transport code. Experimentally, radiation was delivered using a Varian TrueBeam linac and doses absorbed by water were measured using Gafchromic EBT3 film and ionization chambers, and compared with diode readings. Detector response was characterized via thekQclin,Qmsrfclin,fmsrformalism, choosing a 4x4 cm2reference field.Results.For the unmodified 60017 diode, the maximum error in small field doses obtained from diode readings uncorrected bykQclin,Qmsrfclin,fmsrfactors was determined as 11.9% computationally at +0.25 mm off-axis and 5 cm depth in a 15 MV 0.5x0.5 cm2field, and 11.7% experimentally at -0.30 mm off-axis and 5 cm depth in the same field. A detector modified to include a 1.6 mm thick airgap performed best, with maximum computationally and experimentally determined errors of 2.2% and 4.1%. The 1.6 mm airgap deepened the modified dosimeter's effective point of measurement by 0.5 mm. For some detectors significant differences existed between responses in small fields determined computationally and experimentally, micro-CT imaging indicating that these differences were due to within-tolerance variations in the thickness of an epoxy resin layer.Conclusions.The dosimetric performance of a 60017 diode detector was comprehensively improved throughout 6 and 15 MV small photon fields via density compensation. For this approach to work well with good detector-to-detector reproducibility, tolerances on dense component dimensions should be reduced to limit associated variations of response in small fields, or these components should be modified to have more water-like densities.
Keywords: density compensation; detector response; diode; dosimetry; small field.

Link to PubMed record