| Literature DB >> 33224942 |
Vincenzo Patera1, Yolanda Prezado2, Faical Azaiez3, Giuseppe Battistoni4, Diego Bettoni5, Sytze Brandenburg6, Aleksandr Bugay7, Giacomo Cuttone8, Denis Dauvergne9, Gilles de France10, Christian Graeff11, Thomas Haberer12, Taku Inaniwa13, Sebastien Incerti14, Elena Nasonova7, Alahari Navin10, Marco Pullia15, Sandro Rossi15, Charlot Vandevoorde3, Marco Durante11,16.
Abstract
Biomedical applications at high-energy particle accelerators have always been an important section of the applied nuclear physics research. Several new facilities are now under constructions or undergoing major upgrades. While the main goal of these facilities is often basic research in nuclear physics, they acknowledge the importance of including biomedical research programs and of interacting with other medical accelerator facilities providing patient treatments. To harmonize the programs, avoid duplications, and foster collaboration and synergism, the International Biophysics Collaboration is providing a platform to several accelerator centers with interest in biomedical research. In this paper, we summarize the programs of various facilities in the running, upgrade, or construction phase.Entities:
Keywords: accelerators; biomedical research; high-energy ions; particle therapy; space radiation protection
Year: 2020 PMID: 33224942 PMCID: PMC7116397 DOI: 10.3389/fphy.2020.00380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Phys ISSN: 2296-424X
Figure 1Radiation research at accelerators. The shaded region includes values of energy and intensities covered by the present accelerators. MBRT, minibeam radiotherapy; RIB, radioactive ion beams; FLASH, high-dose-rate radiotherapy.
Figure 2Layout of the FAIR facility under construction in Darmstadt (Germany).
Figure 3Beamline for BIOMAT applications in the APPA cave at FAIR.
Figure 4Layout of the NICA facility under construction in Dubna (Russia).
Figure 5Layout of the main facility at iThemba LABS and its future developments. SAIF phase 1 includes phase 0 of the LERIB facility (shaded in pink) and the new 70 MeV cyclotron with its target stations (shaded in blue). The second phase of the project includes the installation of a Rhodotron in the area shaded in yellow for the production of radioactive ion beams (RIB).
Figure 6Layout of the GANIL-SPIRAL2 facility in Caen (France).
Figure 7Experimental cave at ARRONAX (Nantes, France). AX5 is a vertical irradiation beamline.
Figure 8Layout of the SPES facility under construction in Legnaro (Italy).
Figure 9The experimental room at CNAO can be arranged in different configurations according to the experiment requirements.
Figure 10Floor plan of the AGOR accelerator facility with the new infrastructure for image-guided preclinical research.
A comparison of the accelerator facilities in the Biophysics Collaboration.
| Name | Status | Location | Accelerator | Ions | Maximum energy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FAIR | Under construction (starts 2025) | Darmstadt, Germany | Synchrotron (100 Tm) | H to U | ~10 GeV/n |
| GSI | In operation in FAIR-phase-0 | Darmstadt, Germany | Synchrotron (18 Tm) | H to U | ~1 GeV/n |
| NICA | Under construction | Dubna, Russia | Synchrotron | Up to Au | Up to 4.5 GeV/n for Au, up to 800 MeV/n for biomedical applications |
| iThemba | In operation; under upgrade | Cape Town, South Africa | Cyclotron | H | 200 MeV. A 70 MeV cyclotron will be used for isotopes |
| HIMAC | In operation | Chiba, Japan | Synchrotron | He to Fe | ~400 MeV/n for C-ions |
| GANIL | In operation | Caen, France | Cyclotrons | H to U | 95 MeV/n |
| MI2B | In operation | France | Network of different small accelerators | H, He | ~70 MeV |
| SPES | Under construction at LNL-INFN | Legnaro, Italy | Cyclotron | H | 70 MeV |
| LNS-INFN | In operation; under upgrade | Catania, Italy | Cyclotron | H to Au | 80 MeV/n (H to Ne), 50 MeV/n (Au) |
| CNAO | In operation | Pavia, Italy | Synchrotron | H and C | 250 MeV (H), 400 MeV/n (C) |
| HIT | In operation | Heidelberg, Germany | Synchrotron | H, He, C, and O | 480 MeV (H), 430 MeV (He to O) |
| KVI-CART | In operation | Groningen, The Netherlands | Cyclotron | H to Pb | 190 MeV (H), 90 MeV/n (He to O), 75 MeV/n (Ne) |
Highlighted in yellow are the facilities with clinical operation.