학술논문

Measurement of 12C Fragmentation Cross Sections on C, O, and H in the Energy Range of Interest for Particle Therapy Applications
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences IEEE Trans. Radiat. Plasma Med. Sci. Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences, IEEE Transactions on. 4(2):269-282 Mar, 2020
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Energy measurement
Carbon
Production
Ions
Detectors
Uncertainty
Ion beams
Radiation therapy clinical/preclinical evaluation/application studies
scintillators radiation detectors for medical applications
therapy imaging clinical/preclinical evaluation/application studies
Language
ISSN
2469-7311
2469-7303
Abstract
In a carbon ion treatment the nuclear fragmentation of both target and beam projectiles impacts on the dose released on the tumor and on the surrounding healthy tissues. Carbon ion fragmentation occurring inside the patient body has to be studied in order to take into account this contribution. These data are also important for the development of the range monitoring techniques with charged particles. The production of charged fragments generated by carbon ion beams of 115–353 MeV/u kinetic energy impinging on carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen targets has been measured at the CNAO particle therapy center (Pavia, Italy). The use of thin targets of graphite (C), PMMA (C 2 O 5 H 8 ) and polyvinyl-toluene [plastic scintillator (PS), ${\text{C}}_{b}{\text{H}}_{a}$ ] allowed to measure fragments production cross sections, exploiting a time-of-flight (ToF) technique. PS detectors have been used to perform the ToF measurements, while LYSO crystals have been used for the deposited energy measurement and to perform particle identification. Cross sections have been measured at 90° and 60° with respect to the beam direction. The measured proton, deuteron, and triton differential production cross sections on C, O, and H, obtained exploiting the target subtraction strategy, are presented here as a function of the fragment kinetic energy.