The output signal of an organic scintillator probe consists of a scintillation signal and Cerenkov and fluorescence radiation (CFR) signal when the probe is exposed to a mega-voltage photon or electron beam. The CFR signal is usually unwanted because it comes from both the scintillator and light guide and so it is not proportional to the absorbed dose in the scintillator. A new organic scintillator detector system has been constructed for absorbed dose measurement in pulsed mega-voltage electron and photon beams that are commonly used in radiotherapy treatment, eliminating most of the CFR signal. The new detector system uses a long decay constant BC-444G (Bicron, Newbury, OH, USA) scintillator which gives a signal that can be time resolved from the prompt CFR signal so that the measured contribution of prompt signal is negligible. The response of the new scintillator detector system was compared with the measurements from a plastic scintillator detector that were corrected for the signal contribution from the CFR, and to appropriately corrected ion chamber measurements showing agreement in the 16 MeV electron beam used.
An organic scintillator detector system has been developed for radiotherapy bremsstrahlung dosimetry. The scintillators are connected to photodiodes by light pipes as the photodiodes must be removed and shielded from the incident radiation. The photodiodes see visible and near-visible light emissions from the scintillator as well as Cerenkov and fluorescence radiation that has been generated and trapped in the scintillator and light pipe. The Cerenkov and fluorescence radiation limits the accuracy of the dosimeter. This work examines a range of methods for diminishing the signal contribution of Cerenkov and fluorescence radiation while optimizing the scintillator signal. Three methods of achieving these goals have been used. They are: reflective coatings on the scintillator, long-wavelength-emitting scintillators used in conjunction with the photodiode, and absorptive filters placed between the light guide and photodiode. The contribution of the Cerenkov radiation to the light seen by the photodiode has been modelled and the model predictions have been tested using bremsstrahlung beams of peak energy between 13 and 20 MV, showing agreement with measurement.
Plastic organic scintillators are often considered 'water equivalent' in megavoltage photon beams as they have similar atomic composition and density to water. Two plastic scintillators are evaluated for their 'water equivalence', using the Burlin cavity theory, in the photon energy range of 200 keV to 20 MeV. The Burlin theory predicts that the two investigated scintillator materials are likely to be 'water equivalent' in the energy range investigated. The prediction of the Burlin theory for one of these scintillators has been confirmed by absorbed dose measurements in bremsstrahlung beams between 13 and 19 MeV.
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