PET imaging can be used to verify dose distributions of
therapeutic particle beams such as carbon ion beams. The purpose of this
study was to develop a PET detector module which was designed for an in-beam
PET scanner geometry integrated into a carbon beam therapy system, and to
evaluate its feasibility as a monitoring system of patient dose
distribution. A C-shaped PET geometry was proposed to avoid blockage of the
carbon beam by the detector modules. The proposed PET system consisted of 14
detector modules forming a bore with 30.2 cm inner diameter for brain
imaging. Each detector module is composed of a 9 × 9 array of 4.0 mm × 4.0 mm × 20.0 mm LYSO crystal module optically coupled
with four 29 mm diameter PMTs using Photomultiplier-quadrant-sharing (PQS)
technique. Because the crystal pixel was identified based upon the
distribution of scintillation lights of four PMTs, the design of the
reflector between crystal elements should be well optimized. The optical
design of reflectors was optimized using DETECT2000, a Monte Carlo code for
light photon transport. A laser-cut reflector set was developed using the
Enhanced Specular Reflector (ESR, 3M Co.) mirror-film with a high
reflectance of 98% and a thickness of 0.064 mm. All 81 crystal elements
of detector module were identified. Our result demonstrates that the
C-shaped PET system is under development and we present the first
reconstructed image.
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