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Monte Carlo-based revised values of dose rate constants at discrete photon energies
Author(s) -
T. Palani Selvam,
Vandana Shrivastava,
Ghanashyam Chourasiya,
D.A.R. Babu
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of medical physics/journal of medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.292
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1998-3913
pISSN - 0971-6203
DOI - 10.4103/0971-6203.125473
Subject(s) - monte carlo method , photon energy , photon , kerma , absorbed dose , physics , percentage depth dose curve , range (aeronautics) , atomic physics , computational physics , isotropy , nuclear medicine , dosimetry , nuclear physics , materials science , statistics , optics , radiation , mathematics , ionization chamber , ionization , medicine , quantum mechanics , ion , composite material
Absorbed dose rate to water at 0.2 cm and 1 cm due to a point isotropic photon source as a function of photon energy is calculated using the EDKnrc user-code of the EGSnrc Monte Carlo system. This code system utilized widely used XCOM photon cross-section dataset for the calculation of absorbed dose to water. Using the above dose rates, dose rate constants are calculated. Air-kerma strength Sk needed for deriving dose rate constant is based on the mass-energy absorption coefficient compilations of Hubbell and Seltzer published in the year 1995. A comparison of absorbed dose rates in water at the above distances to the published values reflects the differences in photon cross-section dataset in the low-energy region (difference is up to 2% in dose rate values at 1 cm in the energy range 30-50 keV and up to 4% at 0.2 cm at 30 keV). A maximum difference of about 8% is observed in the dose rate value at 0.2 cm at 1.75 MeV when compared to the published value. Sk calculations based on the compilation of Hubbell and Seltzer show a difference of up to 2.5% in the low-energy region (20-50 keV) when compared to the published values. The deviations observed in the values of dose rate and Sk affect the values of dose rate constants up to 3%.

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