The purpose of this study was the investigation of perturbation factors for microionization chambers in small field dosimetry and the influence of penumbra for different spot sizes. To this purpose, correlated sampling was implemented in the EGSnrc Monte Carlo (MC) user code cavity: CScavity. CScavity was first benchmarked against results in the literature for an NE2571 chamber. An efficiency increase of 17 was attained for the calculation of a realistic chamber perturbation factor in a water phantom. Calculations have been performed for microionization chambers of type PinPoint 31006 and PinPoint 31016 in full BEAMnrc linac simulations. Investigating the physical backgrounds of the differences for these small field settings, perturbation factors have been split up into (1) central electrode perturbation, (2) wall perturbation, (3) air-to-water perturbation (chamber volume air-to-water) and (4) water volume perturbation (water chamber volume to 1 mm(3) voxel). The influence of different spot sizes, position in penumbra, measuring depth and detector geometry on these perturbation factors has been investigated, in a 0.8 x 0.8 cm(2) field setting. p(cel) for the PP31006 steel electrode shows a variation of up to 1% in the lateral position, but only 0.4% for the PP31016 with an Al electrode. The air-to-water perturbation in the optimal scanning direction for both profiles and depth is most influenced by the radiation field, and only to a small extent the chamber geometry. The PP31016 geometry (shorter, larger radius) requires less total perturbation within the central axis of the field, but results in slightly larger variations off axis in the optimal scanning direction. Smaller spot sizes (0.6 mm FWHM) and sharper penumbras, compared to larger spot sizes (2 mm FWHM), result in larger perturbation starting in the penumbra. The longer geometries of the PP31006/14/15 exhibit in the non-optimal scanning direction large variations in total perturbation (p(tot) 1.201(4) (0.6 mm spot, 3 mm off axis, type A MC uncertainty) to 0.803(4) (5 mm off axis)) mainly due to volume perturbation. Therefore in IMRT settings, when the detector is not always in the optimal scanning direction, the PP31016 geometry requires less extreme perturbation (max p(tot) 1.130(3)) and shows less variation. However, these results suggest that small variations in positioning, spot size or MLC result in large differences in perturbation factors. Therefore even these 0.016 cm(3) ionization chambers are limited in their use for a field setting of 0.8 x 0.8 cm(2), as used in this investigation.
Polymer gel dosimeters offer a wide range of applications in the three-dimensional verification of complex radiation dose distributions such as in intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT). With the release of polymer gel dosimeters that can be fabricated in normal atmospheric ('normoxic') conditions, the gel manufacturing process has been significantly simplified. Gel dosimeters are calibrated by use of a series of calibration vials irradiated with known doses or by use of a calibration phantom with a known dose distribution. The overall accuracy of the polymer gel dosimeters is determined by different dosimetric properties. In this study, we show the influence of the temperature history during storage of the gel dosimeter on the dose response curve for two gel dosimeters using the monomers acrylamide/N,N'-methylene-bis-acrylamide (nPAG) and methacrylic acid (nMAG) respectively and bis[tetrakis(hydroxymethyl)phosphonium]sulphate (THP) as antioxidant in both gel dosimeters. This study reveals that differences in temperature history after fabrication of normoxic polymer gel dosimeters may compromise the dosimetric accuracy. It was found that the acrylamide based gel dosimeter (nPAG) is less dependent on the post-manufacture temperature history than the methacrylic acid based gel dosimeter (nMAG). The importance of an equal temperature history for the gel dosimeter and calibration vials is emphasized by this study. A reproducibility study has also been performed on the nPAG gel dosimeter when additional efforts are made to control the temperature changes upon cooling.
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