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SU‐FF‐T‐319: Measurement of Neutron Background in Electron Beams From a Dedicated IORT Linear Accelerator and a Conventional Linear Accelerator
Author(s) -
Jaradat A K,
Biggs P
Publication year - 2006
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 - 10.1118/1.2241241
Subject(s) - linear particle accelerator , neutron , physics , nuclear physics , electron , neutron detection , atomic physics , beam (structure) , optics
Purpose: To measure the neutron background for an electron‐only (IORT) and a conventional linear accelerator. Methods & Materials: A Siemens Mevatron ME [6 (not used), 9, 12, 15 and 18 MeV] and several Varian Clinacs [6 (not used), 9, 12, 16 and 20 MeV] were used in this study. Bubble (Type BD‐PND; BTI Bubble Technology Industries) and track‐etch detectors (TE) (Luxel+, Ja; Landauer) were used in these experiments. The detectors were placed at 1m from the target at azimuthal angles of 0°, 45°, 90°, 135° and 180°. Results: For conventional electrons at 0° the neutron leakages (Sv/Gy) are: 2×10 −5 at 12 MeV, 1.0×10 −4 at 16 MeV and 4×10 −4 at 20 MeV. For angles >0°, the leakage is almost angle independent [2×10 −6 at 12 MeV; (0.5–2)×10 −5 at 16 MeV and (2–4)×10 −5 at 20 MeV]. For the ME, the neutron leakage was lower than for the conventional linac and also independent of angle for angles >0° {[0°: 6×10 −6 at 12 MeV; 2×10 −5 at 15 MeV; 5×10 −5 at 18 MeV]; [other angles: (2–5×10 −7 at 12 MeV; (0.7–1.0)×10 −6 at 15 MeV; (2–4)×10 −6 at 18 MeV]}. Using the upper limit of 5×10 −7 Sv/Gy at 12 MeV for angles >0° and assuming a workload of 200Gy/wk and an inverse square factor of 10, the neutron dose is 0.01 mSv/wk. For the primary beam at 12 MeV, the 10x higher dose is compensated by the attenuation in the primary beamstopper † . Conclusions: Measurements have been made of the neutron leakage from an IORT machine and a conventional linear accelerator. The results show that the IORT has a leakage well below that of the conventional machine and that at 12 MeV for the IORT machine, the leakage is sufficiently low at all angles as not to be a regulatory problem.