Paul A Jursinic1. 1. West Michigan Cancer Center, 200 North Park Street, Kalamazoo, MI, 49007, USA.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To investigate the dose response of optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters (OSLDs), and how this response changes with repeated use, increased accumulated dose, and bleaching light with or without a UV component. To devise a method to stabilize dose response characteristics of OSLDs that are used repeatedly. To decrease measurement uncertainty. METHODS: Optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters irradiations were made using a linear accelerator and Ir-192. The OSLDs (InLight nanoDots) dose response was characterized for these various irradiations under the batch, single use, method and the repeated irradiation method. Some nanoDots were preirradiated with hundreds of Gray of dose with Ir-192 gamma rays. Repeated use OSLDs were bleached with lights that had different UV content. A special bleaching light was fabricated and used that had the same spectrum as the light in the OSLD reader. RESULTS: New, never irradiated, nanoDots had their characteristics altered by illumination with bleaching light that had a UV component. Each new nanoDot had unique sensitivity to dose as well as a unique linearity factor, which was supra-linear. NanoDots that were irradiated and bleached repeatedly had changes in low and high dose sensitivity that was altered if the bleaching light had UV in its spectrum. For nanoDots that have been preirradiated with up to 1500 Gy of dose, their dose response was supra-linear for bleaching light without UV content and infra-linear for light with UV content. Preirradiated nanoDots that were bleached with light without UV content had stable dose sensitivity (±1.5%), stable linearity factor (±3.5%) for over 10 bleaching cycles, nonlinear response that was quadratic in dose, and dose measurement uncertainty of ±1.4% for 277 measurements. CONCLUSIONS: The UV component in bleaching light has an impact on the dose sensitivity characteristics shown by new or repeatedly irradiated nanoDots. Each new nanoDot has a unique sensitivity to dose as well as a unique linearity factor, which was supra-linear. As nanoDots accumulate dose with repeated use they change sensitivity to low and high dose very differently based on the UV content of the bleaching light. For nanoDots that have been preirradiated with hundreds of Gray of dose their dose response was supra-linear for bleaching light without UV content and infra-linear for light that has UV content. NanoDots can be used repeatedly and have stable dose response characteristics if they are preirradiated and bleached with light without UV content. Dose can be measured with an uncertainty of 1.4%, which is a threefold reduction of the uncertainty found with the single use batch method recommended by the manufacturer.
PURPOSE: To investigate the dose response of optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters (OSLDs), and how this response changes with repeated use, increased accumulated dose, and bleaching light with or without a UV component. To devise a method to stabilize dose response characteristics of OSLDs that are used repeatedly. To decrease measurement uncertainty. METHODS: Optically stimulated luminescent dosimeters irradiations were made using a linear accelerator and Ir-192. The OSLDs (InLight nanoDots) dose response was characterized for these various irradiations under the batch, single use, method and the repeated irradiation method. Some nanoDots were preirradiated with hundreds of Gray of dose with Ir-192 gamma rays. Repeated use OSLDs were bleached with lights that had different UV content. A special bleaching light was fabricated and used that had the same spectrum as the light in the OSLD reader. RESULTS: New, never irradiated, nanoDots had their characteristics altered by illumination with bleaching light that had a UV component. Each new nanoDot had unique sensitivity to dose as well as a unique linearity factor, which was supra-linear. NanoDots that were irradiated and bleached repeatedly had changes in low and high dose sensitivity that was altered if the bleaching light had UV in its spectrum. For nanoDots that have been preirradiated with up to 1500 Gy of dose, their dose response was supra-linear for bleaching light without UV content and infra-linear for light with UV content. Preirradiated nanoDots that were bleached with light without UV content had stable dose sensitivity (±1.5%), stable linearity factor (±3.5%) for over 10 bleaching cycles, nonlinear response that was quadratic in dose, and dose measurement uncertainty of ±1.4% for 277 measurements. CONCLUSIONS: The UV component in bleaching light has an impact on the dose sensitivity characteristics shown by new or repeatedly irradiated nanoDots. Each new nanoDot has a unique sensitivity to dose as well as a unique linearity factor, which was supra-linear. As nanoDots accumulate dose with repeated use they change sensitivity to low and high dose very differently based on the UV content of the bleaching light. For nanoDots that have been preirradiated with hundreds of Gray of dose their dose response was supra-linear for bleaching light without UV content and infra-linear for light that has UV content. NanoDots can be used repeatedly and have stable dose response characteristics if they are preirradiated and bleached with light without UV content. Dose can be measured with an uncertainty of 1.4%, which is a threefold reduction of the uncertainty found with the single use batch method recommended by the manufacturer.
Authors: Francesco Romano; Claude Bailat; Patrik Gonçalves Jorge; Michael Lloyd Franz Lerch; Arash Darafsheh Journal: Med Phys Date: 2022-05-07 Impact factor: 4.506