In the field of beam physics, two frontier topics have taken center stage due to their potential to enable new approaches to discovery in a wide swath of science. These areas are: advanced, high gradient acceleration techniques, and x-ray free electron lasers (XFELs). Further, there is intense interest in the marriage of these two fields, with the goal of producing a very compact XFEL. In this context, recent advances in high gradient radio-frequency cryogenic copper structure research have opened the door to the use of surface electric fields between 250 and 500 MV m−1. Such an approach is foreseen to enable a new generation of photoinjectors with six-dimensional beam brightness beyond the current state-of-the-art by well over an order of magnitude. This advance is an essential ingredient enabling an ultra-compact XFEL (UC-XFEL). In addition, one may accelerate these bright beams to GeV scale in less than 10 m. Such an injector, when combined with inverse free electron laser-based bunching techniques can produce multi-kA beams with unprecedented beam quality, quantified by 50 nm-rad normalized emittances. The emittance, we note, is the effective area in transverse phase space (x, p x /m e c) or (y, p y /m e c) occupied by the beam distribution, and it is relevant to achievable beam sizes as well as setting a limit on FEL wavelength. These beams, when injected into innovative, short-period (1–10 mm) undulators uniquely enable UC-XFELs having footprints consistent with university-scale laboratories. We describe the architecture and predicted performance of this novel light source, which promises photon production per pulse of a few percent of existing XFEL sources. We review implementation issues including collective beam effects, compact x-ray optics systems, and other relevant technical challenges. To illustrate the potential of such a light source to fundamentally change the current paradigm of XFELs with their limited access, we examine possible applications in biology, chemistry, materials, atomic physics, industry, and medicine—including the imaging of virus particles—which may profit from this new model of performing XFEL science.
Various in vivo experimental works carried out on different animals and organs have shown that it is possible to reduce the damage caused to healthy tissue still preserving the therapeutic efficacy on the tumor tissue, by drastically reducing the total time of dose delivery (<200 ms). This effect, called the FLASH effect, immediately attracted considerable attention within the radiotherapy community, due to the possibility of widening the therapeutic window and treating effectively tumors which appear radioresistant to conventional techniques. Despite the experimental evidence, the radiobiological mechanisms underlying the FLASH effect and the beam parameters contributing to its optimization are not yet known in details. In order to fully understand the FLASH effect, it might be worthy to investigate some alternatives which can further improve the tools adopted so far, in terms of both linac technology and dosimetric systems. This work investigates the problems and solutions concerning the realization of an electron accelerator dedicated to FLASH therapy and optimized for in vivo experiments. Moreover, the work discusses the saturation problems of the most common radiotherapy dosimeters when used in the very high dose-per-pulse FLASH conditions and provides some preliminary experimental data on their behavior.
Purpose: The electron linac ElectronFlash installed at Institut Curie (Orsay, France) is entirely dedicated to FLASH irradiation for radiobiological and pre-clinical studies. The system was designed to deliver an ultra-high-dose rate per pulse (UHDR) (above 106 Gy/s) and a very high average dose rate at different energies and pulse durations. A campaign of tests and measurements was performed to obtain a full reliable characterizations of the electron beam and of the delivered dose, which are necessary to the radiobiological experiments. Methods: A Faraday cup was used to measure the electron charges in a single RF pulse. The percentage depth dose (PDD) and the transverse dose profiles, at the energies of 5 MeV and 7 MeV, were evaluated employing Gafchromic films EBT-XD for two Poly-methylmethacrylate (PMMA) applicators with irradiation sizes of 30 mm and 120 mm, normally used for in vivo and in vitro experiments, respectively. The results were compared with Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. Results: The measurements were performed during a period of a few months in which the experimental set up was adapted and tuned in order to characterize the electron beam parameters and the values of delivered doses before the radiobiological experiments. The measurements showed that the dose parameters, obtained at the energy of 5 MeV and 7 MeV with different applicators, fulfill the FLASH regime, with a maximum value of an average dose rate of 4750 Gy/s, a maximum dose per pulse of 19 Gy and an instantaneous dose rate up to 4.75 ×106 Gy/s. By means of the PMMA applicators, a very good flatness of the dose profiles was obtained at the cost of a reduced total current. The flatness of the large field is reliable and reproducible in radiobiological experiments. The measured PDD and dose profiles are in good agreement with Monte Carlo simulations with more than 95% of the gamma-index under the thresholds of 3 mm/3%. Conclusions: The results show that the system can provide UHDR pulses totally satisfying the FLASH requirements with very good performances in terms of beam profile flatness for any size of the fields. The monitoring of electron beams and the measurement of the dose parameters played an important role in the in vivo and in vitro irradiation experiments performed at the Institut Curie laboratory.
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