4.6 Article

Ion collection efficiency of ionization chambers in ultra-high dose-per-pulse electron beams

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 819-830

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mp.14620

Keywords

FLASH; ion collection efficiency; ionization chamber; ultra‐ high dose‐ per‐ pulse

Funding

  1. EMPIR programme
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study investigated the ion collection efficiency of vented ionization chambers in ultra-high dose-per-pulse electron beams, evaluating the impact of chamber design and electric field strength. Experimental results showed that reducing electrode distance and increasing field strength can improve ion collection efficiency and reduce polarity effects.
Purpose The ion collection efficiency of vented ionization chambers has been investigated in an ultra-high dose-per-pulse (DPP) electron beam. The role of the chamber design and the electric field strength in the sensitive air volume have been evaluated. Methods An advanced Markus chamber and three specially designed parallel plate air-filled ionization chambers (EWC: End Window Chamber) with varying electrode distance of 0.5, 1, and 2 mm have been investigated. Their ion collection efficiencies were determined experimentally using two methods: extrapolation of Jaffe plots and comparison against a DPP-independent reference detector. The latter was achieved by calibrating a current transformer against alanine dosimeters. All measurements were performed in a 24 MeV electron beam with DPP values between 0.01 and 3 Gy. Additionally, the numerical approach introduced by Gotz et al. was implemented taking into account space charge effects at these ultra-high DPPs. The method has been extended to obtain time-resolved and position-dependent electric field distortions within the air cavity. Results The ion collection efficiency of the investigated ionization chambers drops significantly in the ultra-high DPP range. The extent of this drop is dependent on the electrode distance, the applied chamber voltage and thus the field strength in the sensitive air volume. For the Advanced Markus chamber, a good agreement between the experimental, numerical and the results of Petersson et al. could be shown. Using the three EWCs with different electrode spacing, an improvement of the ion collection efficiency and a reduction of the polarity effect with decreasing electrode distance could be demonstrated. Furthermore, the results revealed that the determination of the ion collection efficiency from the Jaffe plots and therefore also from two-voltage method typically underestimate the ion collection efficiency in the region of high dose-per-pulse (3 to 130 mGy) and overestimate the ion collection efficiency at ultra-high dose-per-pulse (>1 Gy per pulse). Conclusions In this work, the ion collection efficiency determined with different methods and ionization chambers have been compared and discussed. As expected, an increase of the electric field in the ionization chamber, either by applying a higher bias voltage or a reduction of the electrode distance, improves the ion collection efficiency and also reduces the polarity effect. For the Advanced Markus chamber, the experimental results obtained by comparison against a reference agree well with the numerical solution. Based on these results, it seems possible to keep the recombination loss less than or equal to 5% up to a dose-per-pulse of 3 Gy with an appropriately designed ionization chamber, which corresponds to the level accepted in conventional radiotherapy dosimetry protocols.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available