학술논문

Investigation of the Dosimetry Properties of Radioluminescent Nitrogen-Doped Tapered Optical Fibers
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Sensors Journal IEEE Sensors J. Sensors Journal, IEEE. 23(22):27300-27306 Nov, 2023
Subject
Signal Processing and Analysis
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Robotics and Control Systems
Optical fiber sensors
Sensors
Optical fiber testing
Radiation effects
Optical fiber couplers
Sensitivity
Optical fiber dispersion
Dosimetry
Geant4
nitrogen (N)
optical fiber
radiation-induced luminescence (RIL)
tapered fiber sensor
X-rays
Language
ISSN
1530-437X
1558-1748
2379-9153
Abstract
We investigated the feasibility to develop miniaturized fiber radioluminescent dosimeters by drawing tapered nitrogen-doped silica-based optical fibers. We show that these tapered fibers can efficiently monitor in real-time 100-kV X-ray flux at dose rates ranging from ~0.02 to 6 Gy(SiO2)/s. The material radiation sensitivity is shown to increase due to the fiber tapering process, to the extent that we could monitor the X-ray flux with an N-doped fiber with a core of less than $1 ~\mu \text{m}$ in diameter. Monte Carlo simulations with the Geant4 toolkit confirm that this sensitivity increase cannot only be explained by the change in the dose deposition caused by different sensor geometries. These tapered optical fibers appear as promising devices for in situ microscale embedded dosimetry of small-size beams, e.g., for radiation therapy treatments. In this context, these sensors could overcome the challenge of providing the highest possible spatial resolution in order to have increasingly precise treatments with microbeams. The obtained results can also be exploited to predict the potentialities and limits on the use of these tapered sensors in other environments involving higher energy particles.