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Measurement of Absorbed Dose (5)

Measurement of Absorbed Dose (5). 參考資料: 1. The Physics of Radiation Therapy. Faiz M. Khan 2. Introduction to Radiological Physics and Radiation Dosimetry. Frank H. Attix. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory. Chamber Volume

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Measurement of Absorbed Dose (5)

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  1. Measurement of Absorbed Dose (5) 參考資料:1. The Physics of Radiation Therapy.Faiz M. Khan2. Introduction to Radiological Physics and Radiation Dosimetry. Frank H. Attix

  2. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • The quantity Jgcan be determined for a chamber of known volume or known mass of air in the cavity if the chamber is connected to a charge-measuring device. • However, the chamber volume is usually not known to an acceptable accuracy. • Indirect method of measuring • Jairis to make use of the exposure calibration of the chamber for Co-60 γray beam

  3. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • Suppose the chamber with this build-up cap is exposed in free air to a Co-60 beam and that a transient electronic equilibrium exists at the center of the chamber. • assume initially that the chamber wall and the build-up cap are composed of the same material (wall).

  4. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • if the chamber (plus the build-up cap) is replaced by a homogeneous mass of wall material with outer dimensions equal to that of the cap,

  5. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • where is the ratio of electron fluence at the reference point P (center of the cavity) with chamber cavity filled with wall material to that with the cavity filled with air. • This correction is applied to the Bragg-Gray relation to account for change in electron fluence

  6. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • ψ in the above equation can be replaced by Ψ , provided a transient electron equilibrium exists throughout the region of the wall

  7. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • If Dair is the absorbed dose to air that would exist at the reference point with the chamber removed and under conditions of transient electronic equilibrium in air,

  8. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume

  9. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • Also Dair (under conditions of transient electronic equilibrium in air) can be calculated from exposure measurement in a Co-60 beam with a chamber plus build-up cap,

  10. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • where k is the charge per unit mass produced in air per unit exposure ( 2.58 x 10-4 C kg-1R-1 ) • M is the chamber reading normalized to standard atmospheric, 22℃, 760 mmHg • Aion is the correction for ionization recombination under calibration conditions, • Pion is the ionization recombination correction for the present measurement.

  11. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume

  12. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume

  13. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume • consider a more realistic situation in which the chamber wall and build-up cap are of different materials.

  14. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Chamber Volume

  15. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Effective Point of Measurement • Plane Parallel Chambers • Since the front plane • (toward the source) of the • air cavity is flat and is • exposed to a uniform fluence • of electrons, the point of • measurement is at • the front surface • of the cavity.

  16. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Effective Point of Measurement • Cylindrical Chambers • Electrons (from an electron beam or generated by photons) transversing a cylindrical chamber of internal radius r will enter the sensitive volume of the chamber (air cavity) at different distances from the center of the chamber.

  17. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Effective Point of Measurement • Cylindrical Chambers • Dutreix and Dutreix showed that theoretically the point of measurement for a cylindrical chamber in a unidirectional beam is displaced by 0.85r from the center and toward the source. • the effective point of measurement is influenced by the number of electrons entering through a surface area ds at A of the chamber and the track length of these electrons in the cavity.

  18. The Bragg-Gray cavity theory • Effective Point of Measurement • Cylindrical Chambers • Dutreix and Dutreix :

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