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Dosimetry Fundamentals II

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Title: Dosimetry Fundamentals II


1
Dosimetry Fundamentals II
  • General Characteristics of Dosimeters

2
Absoluteness
  • An absolute dosimeter is one that can be
    assembled and used to measure the absorbed dose
    deposited in its own sensitive volume without
    requiring calibration in a known field of
    radiation
  • It may, however, need some kind of calibration
    not involving radiation, such as
    electrical-heating calibration of a calorimetric
    dosimeter

3
Absoluteness (cont.)
  • Three types of dosimeters are now generally
    regarded as being capable of absoluteness
  • Calorimetric dosimeters
  • Ionization chambers
  • Fricke ferrous sulfate dosimeters

4
Absoluteness (cont.)
  • These are not always employed as absolute
    dosimeters, however, because calibration offers
    certain advantages
  • A calibration can be stated in terms of some
    quantity of interest other than the absorbed dose
    in the sensitive volume, e.g., tissue dose or
    exposure
  • It can also provide traceability to an
    authoritative standardization laboratory such as
    the NRCC

5
Absoluteness (cont.)
  • When an absolute dosimeter is used independently,
    it relies on its own accuracy instead of
    referring to a standard dosimeter in common with
    other radiation users
  • Thus an error may go undetected in an absolute
    dosimeter unless comparisons with others are
    carried out, or a calibration is obtained at a
    standardization laboratory

6
Absoluteness (cont.)
  • The calorimetric dosimeter has the fundamental
    advantage of directly measuring the heat to which
    the absorbed dose degrades, without dependence on
    any coefficient of conversion such as to
    ionization (W) or to chemical yield (G)
  • Thus if there is a hierarchy of dosimeter
    absoluteness, the calorimeter ranks at the top
  • Note that the absoluteness of a dosimeter is
    independent of its precision or its accuracy

7
Precision and Accuracy
  • The concept of the precision or reproducibility
    of dosimeter measurements was discussed earlier
    it has to do with random errors due to
    fluctuations in instrumental characteristics,
    ambient conditions, and so on, and the stochastic
    nature of radiation fields
  • Precision can be estimated from the data obtained
    in repeated measurements, and is usually stated
    in terms of the standard deviation
  • High precision is associated with a small
    standard deviation

8
Precision and Accuracy (cont.)
  • The accuracy of dosimeter measurements expresses
    the proximity of their expectation value to the
    true value of the quantity being measured
  • Thus it is impossible to evaluate the accuracy of
    data from the data itself, as is done to assess
    their precision
  • Accuracy is a measure of the collective effect of
    the errors in all the parameters that influence
    the measurements
  • In experiments that are limited to relative
    measurements, only the precision, not the
    accuracy, is important

9
Precision and Accuracy (cont.)
  • Clearly precision and accuracy are separate
    characteristics
  • Measurements may be highly precise but
    inaccurate, or vice versa, or may be strong in
    both or neither of these virtues
  • If one speaks of a dosimeter as being a
    high-precision instrument, one means that it is
    capable of excellent measurement reproducibility
    if properly employed

10
Precision and Accuracy (cont.)
  • Poor technique, a hostile environment (e.g., high
    atmospheric humidity) or faulty peripheral
    equipment (e.g., ion-chamber cables or
    electrometer) may cause poor reproducibility
  • Accuracy depends on the type of radiation being
    measured, and dosimeter calibrations are more or
    less specific in that respect
  • A dosimeter that is accurately calibrated to
    measure the exposure at one x-ray quality may be
    significantly in error at another

11
Precision and Accuracy (cont.)
  • The quantity that a dosimeter is inherently the
    most capable of measuring accurately, and that is
    the least influenced by changing the type or
    quality of the radiation, is the absorbed dose
    deposited in the dosimeters own sensitive volume

12
Dose Range Dose Sensitivity
  • To be useful, a dosimeter must have adequate dose
    sensitivity (dr/dDg) throughout the dose range
    to be measured
  • A constant dose sensitivity throughout the range
    provides a linear response, that is desirable for
    ease of calibration and interpretation
  • However, single-valuedness of the function
    r(Dg), even if nonlinear, may be acceptable,
    though it requires that the calibration be
    carried out at a multiplicity of doses to provide
    a calibration curve

13
Dose Range Background Readings and Lower Range
Limit
  • The lower limit of the useful dose range may be
    imposed by the instrumental background or
    zero-dose reading
  • The is the value of r r0 observed when Dg 0
    sometimes it is referred to as spurious
    response, since it is not caused by radiation
  • Examples of r0 include charge readings due to
    ion-chamber insulator leakage, and
    thermo-luminescence dosimeter readings resulting
    from response of the reader to infrared light
    emission by the dosimeter heater

14
Background Readings (cont.)
  • The instrumental background should be subtracted
    from any dosimeter reading
  • The usual procedure for determining this
    correction is to make measurements with the same
    dosimeter treated in the same way (including
    duration of the time) except for the absence of
    the applied radiation field
  • In this way the quantity one measures is r0 plus
    the radiation background reading rb

15
Background Readings (cont.)
  • If a background reading is very reproducible from
    run to run, subtracting it from a dosimeter
    reading may have little effect on the precision
    of the instrument
  • In many cases, however, the background reading
    exhibits significant nonreproducibility
  • The lower limit of the practical dose range of a
    dosimeter is usually estimated to be the dose
    necessary to double the instrumental background
    reading

16
Background Readings (cont.)
  • Evaluation of the precision of the measurements
    from repeated readings of both the radiation and
    the background will of course provide more
    quantitative information
  • If ?? is the S.D. of the average of a group of
    radiation readings r, and ??0 is the S.D. of the
    average of the background readings r 0, then the
    S.D. of the net radiation reading r r0 is given
    by
  • (Note that these are not percentage S.D.s)

17
Background Readings (cont.)
  • If the background reading is negligibly small,
    then the lower dose limit is imposed by the
    capability of the dosimeter readout instrument to
    provide a readable value of r for the dose to be
    measured, Dg
  • If r is less than 10 of full scale on analogue
    instruments, or contains fewer than three
    significant figures on digital readouts, the
    precision and accuracy may both become
    unsatisfactory
  • A more sensitive scale should then be used

18
Dose Range Upper Limit of the Dose Range
  • The upper limit of the useful dose range of a
    dosimeter may be imposed simply by external
    instrumental limitations, such as reading off
    scale on the least sensitive range of an
    electrometer
  • Alternatively some kind of inherent limit may be
    imposed by the dosimeter itself

19
Upper Limit (cont.)
  • Causes of this type include
  • Exhaustion of the supply of atoms, molecules, or
    solid-state entities (traps) being acted upon
    by the radiation to produce the reading
  • Competing reactions by radiation products, for
    example in chemical dosimeters
  • Radiation damage to the dosimeter (e.g.,
    discoloration of light-emitting dosimeters, or
    damage to electrical insulators)

20
Upper Limit (cont.)
  • Usually the upper limit of the dose range is
    manifested by a decrease in the dose sensitivity
    (dr/dDg) to an unacceptable value
  • It may be reduced to zero, or to a negative
    value, as in the following diagram, which causes
    the dose-response function to become double-valued

21
Illustrating a double-valued dose-response
function resulting from a decrease in the
dosimeter sensitivity at high doses
22
Upper Limit (cont.)
  • In such a case other information is needed to
    decide which dose is represented by a large
    r-value, as shown in the figure
  • It is of course possible in principle to make use
    of the negative-slope part of a dose-response
    curve such as that in the figure for dosimetry
    purposes if it is sufficiently reproducible

23
Dose-Rate Range For Integrating Dosimeters
  • If a dosimeter is to be used for measuring the
    time-integrated dose (not the dose rate), then it
    is necessary that its reading not depend on the
    rate at which the dose is delivered, at least
    within the range of dose rates to be encountered
  • Usually there will not be any low-dose-rate
    limitation except that imposed by the lower dose
    limits already discussed

24
Integrating Dosimeters (cont.)
  • One case of a genuine low-dose-rate limitation is
    reciprocity-law failure in photographic film
    dosimeters
  • It occurs only with low-LET radiation (e.g., x
    rays or electrons) and is due to the necessity
    for several ionizing events to occur in a single
    grain of silver bromide to make it developable
  • Low-LET radiation can only create one ion pair at
    a time in a small volume like a AgBr grain in
    photographic emulsion, and after a time the ions
    can recombine

25
Integrating Dosimeters (cont.)
  • Thus the grain repairs itself at low enough dose
    rates, and never produces a latent image, that
    is, reaches a condition of developability
  • Consequently it never contributes to the opacity
    of the film, which is the parameter used to
    measure the dose
  • Biological damage by low-LET radiation exhibits
    similar time-repair characteristics

26
Integrating Dosimeters (cont.)
  • The upper limit of dose-rate independence usually
    occurs when charged-particle tracks are created
    close enough together in space and time to allow
    the ions, electron-hole pairs, or active chemical
    products such as free radicals to interact
    between tracks
  • In an ion chamber this is called general or
    volume ionic recombination
  • Similar back reactions also occur in solid or
    liquid dosimeters, resulting in a loss of
    contribution to the reading r

27
Dose-Rate Range For Dose-Rate Meters
  • It is desirable in dose-rate-measuring dosimeters
    that the reading r be proportional to the dose
    rate dDg/dt, or at least to be a single-valued
    function of it
  • Jamming or paralysis of an instrument, causing
    it to read zero or a small response at high dose
    rates, as can occur in Geiger-Müller counters
    when the dead time overlaps and becomes
    continuous, is intolerable, especially in
    personnel monitoring meters

28
Dose-Rate Meters (cont.)
  • The upper limit on the usable dose-rate range
    more usually takes the form of some kind of
    saturation of the reading vs. dose rate, due to
    ionic recombination or other results of track
    proximity
  • The counting of two or more events as one when
    they occur temporally too close together in
    pulse-counting dosimeters also may cause
    saturation
  • Other modes of saturation may also occur in
    various kinds of dosimeters

29
Dose-Rate Meters (cont.)
  • In dose-rate measurements the response time
    constant, while not a limitation on the dose-rate
    range, is also an important consideration
  • It is defined as the time it takes for the
    reading in a constant field to rise to within 1/e
    of its steady-state value, or to decay to 1/e of
    that value upon removal from the field
  • A long time constant will cause a dose-rate meter
    to seek a mean reading value in a repetitively
    pulsed radiation field

30
Stability Before Irradiation
  • The characteristics of a dosimeter should be
    stable with time until it is used
  • That includes shelf life and time spent in situ
    until irradiated (e.g., worn by personnel if a
    health-physics monitoring dosimeter)
  • Effects of temperature, atmospheric oxygen or
    humidity, light, and so on can cause a gradual
    change in the dose sensitivity or the
    instrumental background
  • Photographic, chemical, or solid-state dosimeters
    are generally more susceptible to these
    influences than ion chambers or counters

31
Stability After Irradiation
  • The latent reading in some types of integrating
    dosimeters (e.g., photographic, chemical,
    solid-state) may be unstable to some extent,
    suffering fading losses during the time
    interval between irradiation and readout
  • Again, harsh ambient conditions of elevated
    temperature or humidity, direct sunlight or
    bright fluorescent lighting, and so on, may
    aggravate this effect

32
After Irradiation (cont.)
  • If such time-dependent fading losses are
    unavoidable, it is advantageous to make them as
    reproducible as possible through standardization
    of laboratory technique so that a fading
    correction can be applied to the readings
  • The following diagram outlines a protocol for
    measuring both the pre- and postirradiation
    instabilities of a group of identical dosimeters

33
Protocol for measuring pre- and postirradiation
instability effects in integrating dosimeters,
where a common dosimeter preparation time tp is
used
34
Energy Dependence Specification
  • Generally speaking, the energy dependence of a
    dosimeter is the dependence of its reading r, per
    unit of the quantity it is supposed to measure,
    upon the quantum or kinetic energy of the
    radiation, as illustrated in the following
    diagram
  • Pane A shows the reading r obtained from an
    imaginary dosimeter vs. some dosimetric quantity
    J (such as exposure, absorbed dose in water under
    CPE conditions, etc.)

35
Illustration of the general concept of energy
dependence
36
Energy Dependence (cont.)
  • Let us suppose that the calibration curves shown
    have been obtained at the three different
    radiation energies (or qualities) E1, E2, and E3,
    as shown
  • In this example the dosimeter response is assumed
    to be linear at energy E1, but becomes
    progressively more nonlinear at E2 and E3
  • The corresponding plots of r/J vs. J are shown in
    B
  • The energy-dependence curves for the two J-values
    J1 and J2 are given in C, and are seen to differ
    in this case for E gt E1

37
Energy Dependence (cont.)
  • If only a single curve of r vs. J, for instance
    the E3 curve in A, were obtained at all energies,
    then the dosimeter would be energy-dependent at
    all J-levels
  • For each value of J a horizontal line would
    result as in D, producing a family of such
    energy-dependent r/J curves for different
    J-values
  • If the single energy-independent calibration
    curve were linear, then a common horizontal line
    would result in D, providing a single r/J value
    that would be applicable to all J-values and all
    radiation energies

38
Energy Dependence ? Dependence of the Dosimeter
Reading, per Unit of X- or ?-ray Exposure, on the
Mean Quantum Energy or Quality of the Beam, r/X
vs. E
  • This usage is commonly found in health-physics
    personnel monitoring or any application in which
    exposure is commonly referred to
  • 60Co ?-rays are frequently used as the reference
    energy for normalization, producing
    energy-dependence curves looking typically like
    the following figure for dosimeters made of
    materials higher than, equal to, and lower than
    air in atomic number

39
Typical energy-dependence curves in terms of the
response per unit exposure of x- or ?-rays
40
r/X vs. E (cont.)
  • The rise in the top curve below about 0.1 MeV is
    caused by the onset of photoelectric effect in
    the sensitive volume of the dosimeter
  • The flat maximum usually occurs at about 30-50
    keV, below which the curve may slowly descend due
    to attenuation in the dosimeter, onset of
    photoelectric effect in the reference material
    (air), and LET dependence of the dosimeter

41
r/X vs. E (cont.)
  • The shape of the curves can be estimated by
  • where the subscript g refers to the material
    in the dosimeters sensitive volume

42
r/X vs. E (cont.)
  • This equation is based on the assumptions that
  • The dosimeters sensitive volume is in
    charged-particle equilibrium, and the wall medium
    w g
  • Attenuation is negligible in the dosimeter, both
    for incident photons and for fluorescence photons
    generated in the dosimeter
  • A given absorbed dose to the sensitive volume
    produces the same reading, irrespective of photon
    energy (i.e., the dosimeter is LET-independent)

43
r/X vs. E (cont.)
  • These assumptions are all questionable and may
    require suitable corrections for their failure in
    specific cases
  • Matching the wall medium to the material in the
    dosimeters sensitive volume can satisfy
    assumption 1
  • Substituting (?/?)g for (?tr/?)g in (?en/?)g has
    the effect of assuming the local reabsorption of
    all fluorescence photons generated in the
    sensitive volume, thus providing an upper limit
    for the influence of that effect

44
r/X vs. E (cont.)
  • Attenuation of photons entering the dosimeter can
    be simply estimated by the straight-ahead
    approximation
  • Failure of assumption 3 is referred to as LET
    dependence of a dosimeter
  • The total effect of assumptions 2 and 3 may cause
    a perfectly air-equivalent dosimeter to decrease
    its reading at low photon energies, as indicated
    by the dashed curve

45
Energy Dependence ? Dependence of the Dosimeter
Reading per Unit of Absorbed Dose in Water on the
Photon or Electron-Beam Energy
  • This usage is commonly found in radiotherapy
    literature, where absorbed dose always refers
    to water (or muscle tissue) unless otherwise
    specified
  • Inasmuch as water and tissue are not identical,
    one should say which is meant, but since the
    differences are small (1) in the megavolt
    region, this choice frequently remains unspecified

46
Absorbed Dose in Water (cont.)
  • For x rays the equation by which a homogeneous
    dosimeters energy dependence can be estimated is
  • which depends on water as a reference material
    and 60Co ? rays for normalization
  • The following figure illustrates this equation
    over the energy range from 1.25 to 50 MeV for LiF
    and bone-equivalent dosimeters

47
X-ray energy dependence estimated for a LiF and a
bone-equivalent dosimeter, in terms of response
per unit absorbed dose in water, normalized to
60Co ? rays
48
Absorbed Dose in Water (cont.)
  • Because of the large secondary-electron ranges at
    these energies, this equation is only satisfied
    to the extent that TCPE is present, g wall w,
    and ? is the same in water as in the dosimeter
  • Also, considerable x-ray attenuation occurs in
    the thick walls, and the size of the resulting
    dosimeter may be impractical anyway
  • In radiotherapy dosimetry these problems are
    usually avoided by doing the measurements in a
    phantom, letting it comprise most of the
    dosimeters wall thickness

49
Absorbed Dose in Water (cont.)
  • For electron beams of kinetic energy T (MeV), the
    corresponding equation for estimating energy
    dependence in terms of the dose to water,
    normalized to T 1 MeV, is

50
Absorbed Dose in Water (cont.)
  • This approximation assumes that
  • CPE exists for ?-rays entering and leaving the
    sensitive volume
  • The incident electrons lose only a very small
    fraction of their energy in traversing the
    dosimeter
  • Electron scattering is the same in g as in water
  • The reading per unit dose to the dosimeters
    sensitive volume remains energy-independent
    (LET-independent)

51
Absorbed Dose in Water (cont.)
  • Items 1 and 3 are suspect, while 2 and 4 are
    easily satisfied in the energy region above 1 MeV
  • The following figure illustrates this equation
    for an air-cavity chamber, LiF, and
    bone-equivalent dosimeters
  • Clearly the lack of polarization effect in the
    gaseous air relative to water causes a large
    energy dependence in that case
  • Neither LiF nor a bone-equivalent dosimeter shows
    much dependence
  • This illustrates the fact that collision
    stopping-power ratios are insensitive to electron
    energy unless the polarization effect is involved

52
Electron-energy dependence estimated for LiF, a
bone-equivalent dosimeter, and an air-filled ion
chamber, in terms of response per unit absorbed
dose in water, normalized to T 1 MeV
53
Energy Dependence ? Dependence of the Dosimeter
Reading per Unit of Absorbed Dose to the Material
in the Sensitive Volume Itself, on the Radiation
Energy or Beam Quality
  • This kind of energy dependence is the most
    fundamental, inasmuch as it reflects the
    dosimeters energy efficiency, i.e., the ability
    of the dosimeter to give the same reading for the
    same amount of absorbed energy in its own
    sensitive volume, regardless of radiation type or
    quality

54
Dose to Sensitive Volume (cont.)
  • It is often called LET dependence because it
    usually manifests itself as a change in the
    reading per unit dose as a function of
    charged-particle track density, due to ionic
    recombination or other second-order effects that
    depend on the proximity of radiation products to
    the dosimeter
  • For example, ion chambers show such LET
    dependence only at radiation energies low enough
    (?10 keV) so the value of W for the gas is no
    longer constant but begins to rise

55
Energy Dependence Modification
  • The energy dependence of a dosimeter can be
    changed to some extent, especially when the
    photoelectric effect is causing an overresponse
  • In that case a medium-Z (e.g., tin), high-Z
    (e.g., lead), or composite filter can be
    incorporated into the design of the dosimeter
    capsule
  • The thickness t can be chosen to correct the
    overresponse at about 100 keV, using e-?t as a
    guide

56
Energy Dependence Modification (cont.)
  • Having determined the thickness needed to correct
    the response at 100 keV, it will be found to have
    been overcorrected at lower energies, the reading
    being essentially zero at 50 keV
  • This can be rectified by perforating the filter
    using the unfiltered height of the maximum
    overresponse as a guide
  • Experimental testing is of course required to
    verify and finally adjust the design

57
Energy Dependence Modification (cont.)
  • This approach to the modification of energy
    dependence adds weight and size, and introduces
    directional dependence to the dosimeter reading,
    influenced by the geometrical design
  • A sophisticated example of a design that
    minimizes the directional dependence is shown in
    the following diagram

58
A perforated filter to reduce the photoelectric
overresponse of a dosimeter while retaining
response to photoelectrons below ?80 keV. The
spherical design minimizes directional dependence.
59
Miscellany
  • The configuration of a dosimeter sometimes is
    crucial to its use
  • It may be necessary to simulate as closely as
    possible the geometry of the test object
  • A thin plastic-film dosimeter might best measure
    the dose in a layer of biological cells
  • Finally, small size of a dosimeter is of primary
    importance in its application in vivo in patients
    or test animals

60
Miscellany (cont.)
  • A dosimeter needs a relevant calibration that is
    appropriate to the radiation type and quality, as
    well as to the quantity to be measured
  • A calibration in terms of the dose to the
    dosimeters own sensitive volume is more
    generally applicable than other types of
    calibrations

61
Miscellany (cont.)
  • If different types of radiation coexist in the
    field to be measured, attention must be paid to
    the relative sensitivity of the dosimeter to the
    different components
  • It may be possible in specific cases to
    discriminate against one type of radiation (e.g.,
    by attenuation) so that another may be measured
    without competition

62
Miscellany (cont.)
  • There are many dosimeters in the literature that
    may be useful but have never become commercially
    available
  • Given a choice, a commercial system is usually
    easier to apply, so long as it satisfies other
    requirements
  • Chemical dosimetry must still be done on the
    basis of local preparation, primarily because of
    shelf-life instability
  • Calorimetric dosimetry has also eluded commercial
    manufacture, so far

63
Miscellany (cont.)
  • The reusability of a dosimeter has several
    important implications
  • Reusable dosimeters such as TLDs can be
    individually calibrated single-use dosimeters
    such as film badges cannot
  • The latter can only be batch-calibrated by
    irradiating and measuring representative samples
  • The precision of the measurements refers to the
    reproducibility of readings obtained from
    different members of the dosimeter batch after
    they have been given identical irradiations

64
Miscellany (cont.)
  • The advantage of reusability of a dosimeter
    depends on how difficult or convenient it is to
    restore it to its original condition
  • If it cannot be fully purged of the effects of an
    earlier dose, some of the advantage is lost
  • A shift in sensitivity, for example, means that
    dosimeters must be segregated on the basis of
    prior history and recalibrated before reusing
  • Economies that may be realized through reuse of
    dosimeters may thus be limited
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