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Monte Carlo study of a highly efficient gas ionization detector for megavoltage imaging and image‐guided radiotherapy
Author(s) -
Keller H.,
Glass M.,
Hinderer R.,
Ruchala K.,
Jeraj R.,
Olivera G.,
Mackie T. Rock
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.1445414
Subject(s) - ionization chamber , monte carlo method , detector , detective quantum efficiency , optics , photon , physics , dosimetry , ionization , image resolution , materials science , nuclear medicine , ion , image quality , medicine , computer science , image (mathematics) , statistics , mathematics , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence
The imaging characteristics of an arc‐shaped xenon gas ionization chamber for the purpose of megavoltage CT imaging were investigated. The detector consists of several hundred 320 μm thick gas cavities separated by thin tungsten plates of the same thickness. Dose response, efficiency and resolution parameters were calculated using Monte Carlo simulations. The calculations were compared to measurements taken in a 4 MV photon beam, assuming that the measured signal in the chambers corresponds to the therein absorbed dose. The measured response profiles for narrow and broad incident photon beams could be well reproduced with the Monte Carlo calculations. They show, that the quantum efficiency is 29.2% and the detective quantum efficiency at zero frequency DQE(0) is 20.4% for the detector arc placed in focus with the photon source. For a detector placed out of focus, these numbers even increase. The efficiency of this kind of radiation detector for megavoltage radiation therefore surpasses the reported efficiency of existing detector technologies. The resolution of the detector is quantified with calculated and measured line spread functions. The corresponding modulation transfer functions were determined for different thicknesses of the tungsten plates. They show that the resolution is only slightly dependent on the plate thickness but is predominantly determined by the cell size of the detector. The optimal plate thickness is determined by a tradeoff between quantum efficiency, total signal generation and resolution. Thicker plates are more efficient but the total signal and the resolution decrease with plate thickness. In conclusion, a gas ionization chamber of the described type is a highly efficient megavoltage radiation detector, allowing to obtain CT images with very little dose for a sufficient image quality for anatomy verification. This kind of detector might serve as a model for a future generation of highly efficient radiation detectors.

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