A polymer-gel eye-phantom for 3D fluorescent imaging of millimetre radiation beams

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

Leonard H. Luthjens (TU Delft - RST/Applied Radiation & Isotopes)

T. Yao (TU Delft - RST/Applied Radiation & Isotopes)

JM Warman (TU Delft - RST/Applied Radiation & Isotopes)

Research Group
RST/Applied Radiation & Isotopes
Copyright
© 2018 L.H. Luthjens, T. Yao, J.M. Warman
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym10111195
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 L.H. Luthjens, T. Yao, J.M. Warman
Research Group
RST/Applied Radiation & Isotopes
Issue number
11
Volume number
10
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Abstract

We have filled a 24 mm diameter glass sphere with a transparent polymer-gel that is radio-fluorogenic, i.e., it becomes (permanently) fluorescent when irradiated, with an intensity proportional to the local dose deposited. The gel consists of > 99.9% tertiary-butyl acrylate (TBA), pre-polymerized to ~15% conversion, and ~100 ppm maleimido-pyrene (MPy). Its dimensions and physical properties are close to those of the vitreous body of the human eye. We have irradiated the gel with a 3 mm diameter, 200 kVp X-ray beam with a dose rate of ~1 Gy/min. A three-dimensional (3D) (video) view of the beam within the gel has been constructed from tomographic images obtained by scanning the sample through a thin sheet of UV light. To minimize optical artefacts, the cell was immersed in a square tank containing a refractive-index-matching medium. The 20-80% penumbra of the beam was determined to be ~0.4 mm. This research was a preparatory investigation of the possibility of using this method to monitor the millimetre diameter proton pencil beams used in ocular radiotherapy.