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Thin silicon strip detectors for beam monitoring in Micro-beam Radiation Therapy

Abstract

Microbeam Radiation Therapy (MRT) is an emerging cancer treatment that is currently being developed at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble, France. This technique uses a highly collimated and fractionated X-ray beam array with extremely high dose rate and very small divergence, to benefit from the dose-volume effect, thus sparing healthy tissue. In case of any beam anomalies and system malfunctions, special safety measures must be installed, such as an emergency safety shutter that requires continuous monitoring of the beam intensity profile. Within the 3DMiMic project, a novel silicon strip detector that can tackle the special features of MRT, such as the extremely high spatial resolution and dose rate, has been developed to be part of the safety shutter system. The first prototypes have been successfully fabricated, and experiments aimed to demonstrate their suitability for this unique application have been performed. Design, fabrication and the experimental results as well as any identified inadequacies for future optimisation are reported and discussed in this paper.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Marco Povoli
  • Enver Alagoz
  • Alberto Bravin
  • Iwan Cornelius
  • Elke Bräuer-Krisch
  • Pauline Fournier
  • Thor-Erik Hansen
  • Angela Kok
  • Michael L.F. Lerch
  • Edouard Monakhov
  • John C Morse
  • Marco Petasecca
  • Herwig Requardt
  • Anatoly B. Rosenfeld
  • Dieter Røhrich
  • Heidi Sandaker
  • Murielle Salomé
  • Bjarne Stugu

Affiliation

  • University of Oslo
  • University of Bergen
  • European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
  • University of Wollongong
  • SINTEF Digital / Smart Sensors and Microsystems

Year

2015

Published in

Journal of Instrumentation (JINST)

ISSN

1748-0221

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Volume

10

Issue

11

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