In order to obtain realistic and reliable Monte Carlo simulations of medical linac photon beams, an accurate determination of the parameters that define the primary electron beam that hits the target is a fundamental step. In this work we propose a new methodology to commission photon beams in Monte Carlo simulations that ensures the reproducibility of a wide range of clinically useful fields. For such purpose accelerated Monte Carlo simulations of 2 x 2, 10 x 10, and 20 x 20 cm2 fields at SSD = 100 cm are carried out for several combinations of the primary electron beam mean energy and radial FWHM. Then, by performing a simultaneous comparison with the correspondent measurements for these same fields, the best combination is selected. This methodology has been employed to determine the characteristics of the primary electron beams that best reproduce a Siemens PRIMUS and a Varian 2100 CD machine in the Monte Carlo simulations. Excellent agreements were obtained between simulations and measurements for a wide range of field sizes. Because precalculated profiles are stored in databases, the whole commissioning process can be fully automated, avoiding manual fine-tunings. These databases can also be used to characterize any accelerators of the same model from different sites.
This work is devoted to studying the influence of chamber response functions on the standard IMRT verification for the different detector technologies available on commercial devices. We have tested three of the most used 2D detector arrays for radiotherapy dosimetry verification, based on air-ionization chambers and diode detectors. The response function has been carefully simulated using the Monte Carlo method and measured through slit and pinhole collimators. Although the response function of air-ionization detectors is considerably different with respect to that of standard diodes, the impact on a verification based in the gamma function with tolerances 3 mm and 3% is quite limited. The results show that the standard air-ionization detector arrays perform in a similar way whenever the tolerances for the gamma function are not lowered below 1.5 mm and 1.5%. Additionally, the sensitivity of these devices to fluence perturbations was measured by intentionally modifying some leaf positions in the multileaf collimator. The wider response function of air-ionization chamber arrays made them slightly more sensitive to random fluence perturbations, although silicon diode arrays are more accurate to describe the dose distribution in a point by point basis.
Background: Conventional air ionization chambers (ICs) exhibit ion recombination correction factors that deviate substantially from unity when irradiated with dose per pulse magnitudes higher than those used in conventional radiotherapy. This fact makes these devices unsuitable for the dosimetric characterization of beams in ultra-high dose per pulse as used for FLASH radiotherapy. Purpose: We present the design, development, and characterization of an ultrathin parallel plate IC that can be used in ultra-high dose rate (UHDR) deliveries with minimal recombination. Methods: The charge collection efficiency (CCE) of parallel plate ICs was modeled through a numerical solution of the coupled differential equations governing the transport of charged carriers produced by ionizing radiation. It was used to find out the optimal parameters for the purpose of designing an IC capable of exhibiting a linear response with dose (deviation less than 1%) up to 10 Gy per pulse at 4 μ s pulse duration. As a proof of concept, two vented parallel plate IC prototypes have been built and tested in different ultra-high pulse dose rate electron beams. Results: It has been found that by reducing the distance between electrodes to a value of 0.25 mm it is possible to extend the dose rate operating range of parallel plate ICs to ultra-high dose per pulse range, at standard voltage of clinical grade electrometers,well into several Gy per pulse.The two IC prototypes exhibit behavior as predicted by the numerical simulation. One of the so-called ultrathin parallel plate ionization chamber (UTIC) prototypes was able to measure up to 10 Gy per pulse, 4 μ s pulse duration, operated at 300 V with no significant deviation from linearity within the uncertainties (ElectronFlash Linac, SIT). The other prototype was tested up to 5.4 Gy per pulse, 2.5 μ s pulse duration, operated at 250 V with CCE higher than 98.6% (Metrological Electron Accelerator Facility, MELAF at Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, PTB). Conclusions: This work demonstrates the ability to extend the dose rate operating range of ICs to ultra-high dose per pulse range by reducing the spacing between electrodes. The results show that UTICs are suitable for measurement in UHDR electron beams.
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