Heidelberg Workshop on Particle Detectors for Ion Beam Therapy Applications

UTC
Glass Box (PI)

Glass Box

PI

Im Neuenheimer Feld 226 1st Floor (Glass Box)
Blake Leverington (Physikalisches Institut)
Description

This is an informal event meant to bring together students and researchers from the various institutes in Heidelberg working on particle detector technologies with applications in Ion Beam Therapy, typically at the HIT clinic.

Topics can include but are not limited to beam instrumentation, dose confirmation, secondary ion tracking, ion-beam radiography, etc.

Registration
Registration Form
11 / 22
Participants
  • Blake Leverington
  • Liqing Qin
  • Luisa Schweins
  • QIAN YANG
  • Rebekka Kirchgässner
  • Renato Félix Bautista
  • Richard Hermann
  • Stefan Schmidt
  • Tim Gehrke
  • Tom Hansmann
  • Yanting Xu
    • 10:05 13:10
      Student Presentations: Student Prentations 1
      • 10:05
        HIT 1 - 30m
        Speaker: Tom Hansmann (HIT BetriebsGmbH)
      • 10:35
        HIT 2 20m
        Speakers: Stephan Brons, Tom Hansmann (HIT BetriebsGmbH)
      • 10:55
        Lateral pencil-beam position monitoring in scanned carbon-ion beam therapy 20m

        A better sparing of healthy tissue and critical organs surrounding a tumor volume is reached in ion beam radiotherapy, in comparison with the conventional X-ray radiotherapy. In radiotherapy with carbon ions, that requires the use of synchrotrons, however, the ion beam delivery is more prone to uncertainties due to the fine-tuning of the beam delivery system, compared to radiotherapy with cyclotron-based protons. These uncertainties can affect the lateral position of the beam during the treatment delivery. This work presents a methodology to monitor the lateral beam positions with high precision by exploiting the tracking of secondary ions produced inside the patient during the treatment delivery. For the secondary ion tracking, a mini-tracker based on Timepix3 detectors was used. The performance of the method was tested in realistic clinic-like treatment situation using an anthropomorphic head phantom irradiated with typical doses at the Heidelberg Ion-Beam Therapy center in Germany. By tracking the secondary ions, the total number of lateral pencil beam positions were successfully measured. Using these data, the beam scanning movement during the delivery was visualized in detail. By comparing to the reference, the majority of the precision and accuracy values were in line with the clinically accepted uncertainties of ±1 mm.

        Speaker: Renato Felix Bautista
      • 11:15
        Tim Gehrke 2 - DKFZ 20m
      • 11:35
        Scintillation Fibre Transverse Profile Monitor for Low-Intensity Ion Beams 20m

        Low intensity ion beams (below 10 million ions/sec.) can be provided at HIT for various experiments via manual degrading, but for now without a feedback system. The development of a transverse ion beam profile monitor for low intensity regions is therefore of interest. The principle of operation is based on scintillating fibres, which transform deposited energy of a throughpassing ion in photons, which are then converted and amplified via silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) to electric pulses. These pulses are recorded and processed by a new sophisticated readout electronics, the front-end readout system (FERS) A5200 by CAEN. A prototype set-up consisting of all above mentioned parts was tested in beam and has proven to record the transverse beam profile successfully from the intensities of 1E7 ions/s till as low as 100 ions/s.

        Speaker: Mr Richard Hermann (HIT)
      • 11:55
        A Scintillating Fibre Beam Profile Monitor 20m
        Speaker: Qian Yang