DocumentCode :
45305
Title :
Radiation Dosimeter Using an Extrinsic Fiber Optic Sensor
Author :
McCarthy, D. ; O´Keeffe, S. ; Lewis, Elfed ; Sporea, Dan G. ; Sporea, Adelina ; Tiseanu, Ion ; Woulfe, Peter ; Cronin, Joseph
Author_Institution :
Opt. Fiber Sensors Res. Centre, Univ. of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland
Volume :
14
Issue :
3
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Mar-14
Firstpage :
673
Lastpage :
685
Abstract :
A novel extrinsic optical fiber X-ray dosimeter for biomedical applications is presented in this paper. The primary focus of the sensor is to measure low doses of ionizing X-ray radiation. The material in the sensor tip scintillates upon exposure to radiation and the resultant low level scintillating light is coupled to a polymethylmethacrylate plastic optical fiber, which guides it toward a distant fluorescent optical spectrometer. The optical spectrometer measures the low level scintillating light from the sensor and converts the ionizing radiation energy to measurable arbitrary optical intensity units. Initial testing showed the scintillating optical fiber X-ray dosimeter exhibits an acceptable sensitivity upon excitation from a calibrated X-ray source. Further examinations of the sensor revealed good response and repeatability of measurement for various levels of low energy ionizing X-ray energy. The sensor was found to exhibit a maximum of 3.23% variance from the average value over ten repetitions. The sensor is sensitive from 50 kVp X-ray energy which continued exponentially up to 140 kVp where the response began to taper off. The sensor demonstrated excellent spectral response upon exposure to 6 MV and 15 MV ionizing X-ray radiation energy from a Siemens Avant Garde linear accelerator. It showed excellent repeatability of measurement upon repeated actuation of the radiation over short bursts of time. The sensor demonstrates very good stability of response during on radiation periods, showing a maximum of 2% variation of the full scale value in each case. This type of optical fiber X-ray dosimeter was tested in the University of Limerick (Ireland), the National Institute for Lasers, Plasma and Radiation Physics (Romania), and the Galway Clinic in Ireland. Further investigations were performed by all three facilities to better characterize additional features of the sensor for different X-ray radiation energies.
Keywords :
X-ray detection; biomedical equipment; calibration; dosimeters; fibre optic sensors; fluorescence; optical fibre testing; optical polymers; optical variables measurement; plastics; polymer fibres; solid scintillation detectors; spectral analysis; Galway Clinic in Ireland; National Institute for Lasers; Plasma and Radiation Physics; Siemens Avant Garde linear accelerator; University of Limerick; X-ray radiation energy ionization; X-ray source calibration; biomedical application; distant fluorescent optical spectrometer; dose measurement; extrinsic fiber optic sensor; extrinsic optical fiber X-ray dosimeter; ionizing X-ray radiation energy; ionizing radiation energy conversion; measurable arbitrary optical intensity unit; polymethylmethacrylate plastic optical fiber; radiation dosimeter; radiation exposure; scintillating light; scintillating light measurement; scintillating optical fiber X-ray dosimeter; spectral response; Materials; Optical fiber sensors; Optical fibers; Phosphors; Fiber optic radiation sensor; PMMA optical fiber; X-ray dosimeter; inorganic scintillator;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1530-437X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2013.2284857
Filename :
6626577
Link To Document :
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