- 1Department of Biomedical, Experimental and Clinical Science “Mario Serio”, University of Florence, Florence, Italy
- 2Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Firenze, Florence, Italy
- 3Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Perugia, Perugia, Italy
Many new X-Ray treatment machines using small and/or non-standard radiation fields, e.g., Tomotherapy, Cyber-knife, and linear accelerators equipped with high-resolution multi-leaf collimators and on-board imaging system, have been introduced in the radiotherapy clinical routine within the last few years. The introduction of these new treatment modalities has led to the development of high conformal radiotherapy treatment techniques like Intensity Modulated photon Radiation Therapy, Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy, and stereotactic radiotherapy. When using these treatment techniques, patients are exposed to non-uniform radiation fields, high dose gradients, time and space variation of dose rates, and beam energy spectrum. This makes reaching the required degree of accuracy in clinical dosimetry even more demanding. Continuing to use standard field procedures and detectors in fields smaller than 3 × 3 cm2, will generate a reduced accuracy of clinical dosimetry, running the risk to overshadowing the progress made so far in radiotherapy applications. These dosimetric issues represent a new challenge for medical physicists. To choose the most appropriate detector for small field dosimetry, different features must be considered. Short- and long-term stability, linear response to the absorbed dose and dose rate, no energy and angular dependence, are all needed but not sufficient. The two most sought-after attributes for small field dosimetry are water equivalence and small highly sensitive (high sensitivity) volumes. Both these requirements aim at minimizing perturbations of charged particle fluence approaching the Charged Particle Equilibrium condition as much as possible, while maintaining high spatial resolution by reducing the averaging effect for non-uniform radiation fields. A compromise between different features is necessary because no dosimeter currently fulfills all requirements, but diamond properties seem promising and could lead to a marked improvement. Diamonds have long been used as materials for dosimeters, but natural diamonds were only first used for medical applications in the 80 s. The availability of reproducible synthetic diamonds at a lower cost compared to natural ones made the diffusion of diamonds in dosimetry possible. This paper aims to review the use of synthetic poly and single-crystal diamond dosimeters in radiotherapy, focusing on their performance under MegaVoltage photon beams. Both commercial and prototype diamond dosimeters behaviour are described and analyzed. Moreover, this paper will report the main related results in literature, considering diamond development issues like growth modalities, electrical contacts, packaging, readout electronics, and how do they affect all the dosimetric parameters of interest such as signal linearity, energy dependence, dose-rate dependence, reproducibility, rise and decay times.
1 Introduction
The most commonly adopted solution (about 50% of cases) for cancer treatment as a unique cure, or in combination with chemotherapy and/or surgery, is radiotherapy [1]. Radiotherapy aims to deliver the prescribed radiation dose to the tumor and targets tissues while minimizing the dose and toxicity to nearby healthy tissues. Many non-standard delivery machines, like CyberKnife, Tomotherapy, and other modern linear accelerators, have been recently developed and implemented for routine clinical use to achieve this goal. Intensity-modulated radiotherapy (IMRT) and its natural evolution Volumetric Modulated Arc Therapy (VMAT) and stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT), have enabled a rapid advance of the precision radiotherapy concept. Such techniques facilitate greater conformity, reduce planning margins and increase the delivered dose to the target volume. However, highly-conformal, high-dose radiotherapy is challenging due to the possible introduction of uncertainties in each step of the treatment process. All these considerations pose new challenges, including from the dosimetric point of view. Dosimetry was a well-established field up until a few years ago; however, the latest technologies have imposed dealing with small non-uniform fields with high dose gradients, time and space dose rate and beam energy spectrum variations. Therefore, to calculate the dose delivered to the patient, new procedures and detectors to measure percentage depth doses, output factors, and beam profiles are necessary. Accurate calculations of a dose using treatment planning systems (TPS) depends on the quality of the measured data used to configure the beam model. Usually, a field size less than 3
2 Materials
In the last few years, the fabrication of diamond substrates, followed by transformation into externally biased or self-biased devices generating a signal when exposed to therapeutic beams, have undergone some significant modifications. First, unlike in the past, the task of growing the substrate is almost always left to firms. This trend is a consequence of the required level of specialization and standardization, too high to be handled efficiently by any research group focused on dosimetry. Besides the historical firm [28] it should be underlined that the number of vendors, such as [29–31] has increased in the past decade. The next important development is the growing diffusion of a commercial dosimeter, the PTW60019 microDiamond, which has become a reference dosimeter after many comparative studies with other types of dosimeters [32–36].
2.1 Diamond Fabrication
The standard production procedures for artificial diamond substrates are High-Pressure High-Temperature (HPHT), homo-epitaxial, and hetero-epitaxial Chemical Vapor Deposition (CVD). In the HPHT process temperatures over 1300°C and pressures of several GPa are reached inside the reaction chamber to access the region of phase space where, from a diamond seed, using a source of carbon atoms the diamond crystal could grow [37]. In dosimetry, the crystal impurity content, which strongly depends on the fabrication process’ optimization, is a relevant parameter for substrate performances [38].
Using the micro-wave plasma-enhanced Chemical Vapour Deposition (CVD) technique it is possible to grow CVD synthetic diamonds starting at a much lower temperature (∼700°C) [39]. By means of very precise control of growth parameters, substrate qualities and the derived detection properties, are reproducible to a high degree. There are essentially two main types of homo -epitaxial CVD diamonds: the single crystal (scCVD), where for the CVD growth, an HPHT diamond is used as a seed, and the polycrystal (pcCVD) where the seeds are diamond nano-crystals or scratches produces by diamond powder [40]. The resulting pcCVD diamond bulk contains grain-boundaries corresponding to the junction of crystal growth from different seeds. These structural defects act as free charge carrier trapping centers. Because of the limited area of the HPHT seeds, the corresponding area of scCVD is below 1 cm2, while with the pcCVD seed matrix, even tens of cm2 could be obtained. Like Diamond-On-Iridium (DOI) where the iridium seeds form the initial matrix, the hetero-epitaxial CVD process uses a non -diamond initial matrix. DOI substrates have sizes, charge collection distance (CCD) and defect concentration in between pcCVD and scCVD standard substrates [41]; Finally, to fabricate wider and thicker substrates, while maintaining an excellent quality, an optimization of the CVD process which applies new concepts in the growth phase is in progress. A new configuration of microwave modes allows obtaining a wider area of the plasma over the substrate with 5% film thickness uncertainty [42]. Introducing oxygen in the gas mixture and controlling the distance between the discharge region core and the substrate top surface, thicker substrates (up to 6 mm) have been produced [43].
2.2 Characterization Techniques
Intrinsically, every artificial diamond substrate has a certain level of defects, both shallow and deep. The shallow levels are unstable at room temperature and will be filled up during irradiation until an equilibrium state between trapping and detrapping is reached. The detrapping must be as slow as possible to permit a measurement session without relevant photosensitivity modification. On the contrary, deep levels, which are stable at room temperature, are filled at the beginning of the irradiation and remain filled for a longer time [44]. Irradiation before starting a measurement session (priming) is therefore mandatory, and the needed dose and dose-rate depend on the substrate type and quality. According to this, it is relevant to characterize the substrate with a variety of techniques customarily used.
• Raman spectroscopy is used before metal electrode fabrication to analyze the crystal structure and the presence of defects and/or contaminants other than diamonds (graphite, sp2 and disordered sp3 carbon compounds) [45]. It is possible, for example, to understand if the crystal structure is pure (peak at 1,332.8 cm-1) or if there are other contributions due to vacancies that could act as a trapping center for charges (other peaks). For the pcCVD substrate, the level of defects could also depend on the large concentration of grain boundaries [46–49]. This analysis is sometimes complemented by optical spectrophotometry or FTIR methods to detect substitutional defects in the diamond lattice.
• Charge Collection Distance (CCD) is related to the free mean path of a charge carrier inside the diamond. In other words, it is a measurement of the charge collection efficiency of a device. CCD For Optical Grade CVD diamond substrates is (30 μm) and for detector grade substrates one order of magnitude higher. The CCD value can be extracted depositing a known amount of energy inside the diamond and measuring the generated signal. Standard sources of radiation for this measurement are α emitting radio-nuclide, either single-peak (241Am or similar) or multi-peak like triple radioisotopes [50, 51].
• Deep and shallow defect levels could be evaluated using the thermally stimulated luminescence (TL) and, less frequently, the photoluminescence techniques. A sensor irradiated with a known dose increases its temperature gradually at a constant rate. The shallow defects will detrap at the beginning of the thermal stimulation while the deeper ones detrap progressively while increasing the temperature [52, 53].
• Another type of information that could be obtained concerning the class of electronically-active defects are their density and energy position. The methods used are a thermally-stimulated current (TSC) [54] and the transport of photogenerated carriers [55].
2.3 Diamond Dimensions and Electrodes Geometry
Detector dimensions and the presence of extra components like electrodes and packaging in diamond dosimeters are crucial because they may alter the tissue equivalence and affect measurements with the volume effect. On these factors depends on the quality of dose measurements. Diamond detector dimensions are crucial, especially in small beam dosimetry, where the detector should have a small detection volume compared to the irradiation beam size, because of the lack of lateral electronic equilibrium. A dose measurement with high spatial resolution is possible using a small diamond sensitive volume. Dosimeters made with scCVD diamond films show excellent dosimetric properties, but the wafer maximum achievable size (1 cm diameter) makes the construction of large-scale dosimeters with this kind of material impossible. On the other hand, due to its potential low cost, pcCVD diamond films with a maximum achievable size of 25 × 25 mm2 surface can be produced and, using different electrode geometries, large sensitive area high spatial resolution devices are obtainable. Diamond dosimeters design is generally a parallelepiped solid-state ionization chamber in two main configurations: with interdigitated electrodes on the same side (3D configuration) [56–59] or electrodes both on front and back sides (called planar or “sandwich” configuration) [60–64].
The most standard configuration for diamond detectors is the “sandwich” geometry. This configuration can be operated in photoconduction (ohmic behaviour) and photovoltaic (Schottky barrier configuration) modes. In the first operation mode, two electrodes are deposited on the diamond film surfaces and a constant external bias is applied: the incident radiation generates a current in the biased structure which is a measure of the absorbed dose. These diamond devices are generally operated using an electric field of 1 V/μm (operation ranges 10–1000 V) for drift velocity saturation. In the presence of an external voltage, charged carriers drift and are trapped by defects within the bulk, generating unwanted polarization effects which influences both the dynamic response stability and the device rise and fall times. It can practically act as an ideal dosimeter only with sufficiently high bias voltages but needs to be improved for better charge collection efficiency, temporal response, and uniformity for applications when a very fast response to following the beam variations is necessary. In the second configuration, due to the settlement of the Schottky barriers at the metal and diamond interface, an active volume is present also without an external polarization voltage. The built-in electric field at electrodes can then be used to collect the incident radiation generated charge in such active regions. Electrons and holes generated by an ionization event, start to drift due to the presence of the built-in electric field (of around 1 V/nm [65]), inducing a current signal in the readout electronics. In the absence of external bias, and thus of an electric field driving the generated charges through the diamond volume, trapping mechanisms in the diamond bulk are negligible. Consequently, the response dynamics becomes mostly unaffected by impurities and less dependent on the overall substrate crystalline quality [65–67]. However, for these kind of geometries, in the absence of a perfect ohmic contact between the metal and diamond, it is also possible to have a partial drift and thus residual signal formation, with a reduced CCE [66].
For planar diamond detectors, electrodes covering the whole surface are recommended because, with a partial electrode covering, the sensitive volume is not well defined. The electric field outside the volume under the electrode is therefore not uniform and is too weak to fully collect the generated charge. The full coverage electrodes also improve the dose rate linearity and the charge collection efficiency [68]. However, electrical contacts that are too large (too close to the plate lateral faces) may induce unexpected leakage conduction at high fields through a large density of defects situated on the lateral sides of the diamond substrate. A 3D electrode geometry may overcome possible volume averaging effects (detector size) fabricating high-resolution detectors for small field dosimetry. The electrode geometry is crucial in defining the sensitive volume of the detector (material between the electrodes). For this new type of detector, by means of a pulsed laser technique [48], the electrodes are fabricated directly inside the diamond, bulk creating a 3D column structure with rectangular cells that are of a small size ∼80 × 120 μm2 [48, 69, 70]. Groups of connected cells can then form pixels or strips of potentially very small sizes. The sensitive area scales down with the decreasing electrode spacing while the depth of the sensitive volume remains unchanged. Using interdigitated electrodes, detectors with very small sensitive areas but with quite high sensitive volumes are fabricated, allowing highly segmented devices with a high signal to noise ratio [56–59].
2.4 Diamond Contacts
The performance of diamond detectors strongly depends on the metal diamond interfaces. Different contact fabrication techniques lead to Ohmic or Schottky electrical contacts. Notwithstanding several studies done in the past years about the metallic electrode manufacturing on diamond substrates, both ohmic or Schottky type, [71–75] diamond contacting is still a challenging task. The difference between the work functions of diamond and metal being in contact, provoke the electrons to flow from the lower to the higher work function. As a consequence, one material becomes slightly positively charged and the other slightly negatively charged creating an effective barrier. After the passage of ionizing radiations, charge accumulation occurs within the crystal and immobile carriers establishing an electric field which acts in a direction opposite to the applied field produced by the external polarization voltage.
Different approaches have been proposed to solve the polarization problems, providing at the same time a method to obtain a durable and stable ohmic contact on the diamond. First, the diamond surface must be prepared before metallization. Ohmic contacts may be obtained on an H-terminated diamond surface, but the drawbacks of a hydrogenated surface are mostly represented by the lack of a strong adhesion of the metal film electrodes on the hydrogen termination and by its thermal instability [72, 76]. It is therefore highly desirable to develop a deposition process of ohmic contact starting from an oxygenated diamond surface–well known to be very stable [51, 67]. The metallic diamond contact could present non-ohmic electrical behaviour or an ohmic one with high specific contact resistance. However, in many cases, it is possible to improve the electrical conduction at the diamond/metal interface by inducing a graphitic layer underneath the diamond substrate surface [77]. Preferred materials for diamond dosimeters electrodes are Al [68, 78, 79], Cr/Au [65, 67, 80], Ag [81]. Amorphous carbon blended with nickel (C/Ni) electrodes for polycrystalline and monocrystalline diamonds are also used to produce near-tissue equivalent detectors [51, 82]. Moreover, to have better adhesion and a detector closer to tissue-equivalence, diamond-like carbon (DLC) contacts have been produced and tested [61, 83]. DLC is a form of amorphous carbon in between a diamond and graphite, containing a significant portion of sp3 bonded atoms in the matrix. The novel contact consists of a very thin (1–3 nm) diamond-like carbon film obtained on a diamond substrate. The extremely thin DLC layer works by charge carrier tunneling, thus avoiding space-charge effects for a wide polarization voltage range. Moreover, it becomes a seed for the sputter deposition of high work function noble metals (Pt, Au) allowing metals to stick on the diamond surface [84]. demonstrated that diamond-like-carbon multi-layer contacts permit the fabrication of devices with a remarkable sensitivity to very low dose rates using the bias voltage as a key operative parameter for different dose rate ranges. Concerning the importance of contact shape, both circular [68, 79, 81] and square contacts [85] are widely used without evidence of advantages of one over the other.
2.5 Detector Readout
Diamond detector response is read out through different standard and dedicated systems divided into two large groups: single channel and multichannel readout electronics. Usually, for the single output detectors, electrical connections to external electronics are carried out through the use of standard triaxial connectors and the measurements of the current are performed with Keithley electrometers(s), which also serve as the power supply to apply the appropriate polarization between the electric contacts [61, 63, 86, 87]. The signal of the commercial diamond dosimeter SCCD-PTW can be read out with any electrometers available in a Radiotherapy unit. To obtain a radiotherapy beam mapping, with high resolution for beams that are generally characterized by strong spatial gradients, the use of diamond dosimeters with high spatial resolution is necessary. To read out more than one channel at a time is therefore necessary in a multichannel system. The natural evolution toward a matrix of sensitive elements read out synchronously is a possible solution. However, the corresponding increase in the number of readout channels is not straightforward. The measurement setup commonly used for the single output, due to the size of the connections and the size and cost of the measurement devices, is hardly usable with more than a single device at a time. Using an integrated multi-channel readout chip, placed the closest possible to the detector, it is possible to solve the problem by reducing the overall sensor size. Several authors studied high-resolution small volume detector developments to design new devices for accurate dosimetry in high energy narrow photon beams. Multichannel detectors consist of pixel matrixes or strips [78, 88]. The energy released in every single active area, generates charges, collected with a specific efficiency by independent readout channels connected to a single pixel or a strip, and is then converted into counts. In more advanced applications, with technologies such as advanced Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs), analogue to digital converters (ADC) and registers are also included [89]. Every channel designed and fabricated in a 0.18 μm CMOS process, includes a charge integrator and an A/D converter. This readout architecture permits storing the digitized signal and avoids dead times. Real-time operations are also efficiently accomplished through field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs). The use of FPGAs guarantees high flexibility, fast, and deterministic data processing like in [90] where an onboard Xilinx FPGA handles the chips readout. Furthermore, very fast readout circuits with an analogue front end for pulse-by-pulse beam intensity measurements have also been developed. The dose deposited by the single pulse is important for dynamic treatments, and its measurement is also possible due to the very fast diamond detectors response [83].
2.6 Detector Housing
To obtain an exact estimation of the absorbed dose studying the detector’s current profile is crucial to knowing the detector’s active volume and the detector’s housing contribution. Because the charge induced by radiation outside the sensitive volume will be collected in addition to the charge released in the detector’s sensitive volume, to correctly model the detector’s response a detailed geometrical knowledge of the solid-state detector housing used is necessary [91–93]. The exact knowledge of the detector support structure is crucial in particular to correctly calculate small field output correction factors with Monte Carlo simulation [94–96]. The detector housing also affects its directional dependence; it therefore seems to be very important to verify the response of the detector in the given set-up. This is true for silicon diodes [97], and for diamond detectors [98, 99]. A suitable diamond dosimeter must be incorporated into a suitable probe’s housing which should not introduce energy dependence. Detectors with metallic shielding overestimate of values [62], therefore, choosing the right material for diamond housing is of crucial importance. The most commonly used housings for diamond dosimeters are cylindrical or tubular [61, 63, 64], but rectangular shape holders are also used [86]. The holders are made of different water equivalent materials like, but not limited to, Perspex, PMMA, and Solid Water GAMMEX 457 etc. [61, 63, 81]. To minimize the presence and effects of ambient light on diamond sensors, some authors use a thin opaque layer [86, 100]. This choice obviates the need to pre-irradiate the detector before dose measurements. The similarity in the atomic composition of all three media (diamond holder, diamond bulk, electrodes) should be beneficial for the design of an energy-independent dosimeter.
3 Radiotherapy Applications
In the 1990s significant research activity in the field of diamond dosimetry was devoted to the development of synthetic diamond detectors to overcome problems related to dosimeters using natural diamond stones [101]. Natural diamond detectors for radiotherapy applications were commercially available, but not widely used due to high cost, inadequate stones availability, and difficulties with result reproducibility. However, thanks to new diamond synthesis developments, both CVD and HPHT diamond are actively considered for radiotherapy dosimetry [47, 61, 102–105]. HPHT crystals resulted in not being suitable for applications on small field dosimetry because they exhibit electronic defects that alter the detector response. Furthermore, early papers on CVD diamond dosimeters underlined some problems related to a non-optimized quality of the crystals, electric contacts, and encapsulation [106, 107]. These drawbacks, not only related to structural properties of the material, did not allow their use in radiotherapy and, in particular, but their application in small field dosimetry was also not considered viable. Afterwards, some studies demonstrated that it was possible to grow single crystal diamonds with a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) process that better satisfy the dosimetric requirements than polycrystalline ones [64, 108].
A description of some of the most cited dosimeters, built according to different designs, focusing on the intensity-modulated applications and small field dosimetry is given in the following paragraphs. Table 1 reports the main proprieties of those dosimeters, while Table 2 lists the advantages and potential drawbacks for small field application.
A CVD synthetic diamond, developed at CEA-LIST, was obtained from an oriented HPHT substrate, which was removed by laser cutting after growth [64]. The device, with an active volume of 0.534 mm3, was first studied to test its potential use as a radiotherapy dosimeter, obtaining a sensitivity of 215 nC Gy−1 mm−3 at a bias voltage of −50 V. The detector signal showed good linearity with dose, and the stability and repeatability of the signal result was well below 0.5%, the threshold limit that is in agreement with the IAEA dosimetric requirements [114]. Investigating the current dependence from the dose rate, the Fowler model’s
In 2013 Marsolat et al. [62, 110], a detector (SCDDo) based on a commercially available single crystal CVD diamond with a detection volume of 0.165 mm3, suitable for small field dosimetry, with fast response and high signal-to-noise ratio was developed. The detector was characterized using clinical photon beams and results compared to those of a diode and a small ionization chamber, both commercially available. The calculated
A single-crystal diamond prototype, working as a Schottky diode with no bias applied, provided more than promising results. The prototype was developed at the University of Tor Vergata (Rome, Italy), and is presently also commercially available (PTW 60019 MicroDiamond). The prototype had a small sensitive volume (0.004 mm3), and it was tested for relative dosimetry with different beam qualities RX (from 1.2–10 MeV) and electrons (from 6 to 18 MeV) [108]. Ciancaglioni et al. (2012) [117] observed linearity of the response as a function of the absorbed dose of about 1.2 cGy with a deviation from linearity less than 0.5% in the range (0.04–50) Gy. The dose rate dependence was studied in the range 1–6 Gy/min obtaining
Single crystal devices demonstrated good performance, whereas polycrystalline films can be grown to larger sizes but with a lower quality mainly due to the presence of structural defects and recombination traps. In the beginning, Polycrystalline CVD detectors, due to their slow response dynamics, could not follow the sharp transients of intensity-modulated fields [133]. Nonetheless, important improvements have also been made using polycrystalline substrates. A dosimetric characterization with 6 MV clinical X rays of CVD dosimeters fabricated from a range of commercially available synthetic diamonds was reported by S. P. Lansley et al. [106]. Devices obtained with substrates from Diamond Materials and Element Six demonstrated high sensitivity, low priming doses, low dark currents and linear relation between current response and dose rate.
Shortly after, a fundamental step forward in the use of these devices was made when a polycrystalline CVD dosimeter was operated with a very low bias voltage [65]. Authors demonstrated that dosimeters made of a polycrystalline diamond operated at null or very low bias voltage, performing well both for relative dosimetry measurements and for pretreatment verification [67, 111]. At present, to our knowledge, the DIAPIX dosimeter manufactured within the DIAPIX Italian project described in [18, 90] is the only large area pixelated diamond dosimeter successfully operated for relative dosimetry and plan verification. the matrix consists of 12 × 12 pixels, 2 mm pitch, covering a total area of (2.5 × 2.5 cm2). Pixels and pitch’s dimensions are a trade-off between spatial resolution and read-out channels, so improving electronics means an increase spatial resolution. Pointlike detector’s spatial resolution is determined by the scanning system and the size of the dosimeter. Instead in 1D-2D dosimeters, the resolution is determined by the pitch between the sensitive volumes in the array and the sensitive volumes’ size. The basic idea to use a 2D-1D instead of pointlike dosimeter comes from the fact that beam fluencies vary in time in the new treatment techniques, and it is not possible to measure them with a pointlike dosimeter. Therefore, 2D dosimeters are appealing, also due to their flexibility. Different configurations could be explored to develop prototypes for pretreatment verification, transmission detectors upstream of the patient, or between the patient and the couch considering all the additional complexities in terms of dose rate, energy, and angular dependence during the transition from single point like detectors to 2D arrays of single point-like detectors [97]. In [90] the authors reported the dosimetric characterization of the DIAPIX detector composed of two pcCVD matrices, each with area 2.5 × 2.5 cm2 and a thickness of 300 μm. The measured rise and fall times are of the order of 0.5 s and 0.1 s, respectively, for all the pixels of both matrices in a dose rate range of 50–500 cGy/min. The dose rate dependence was investigated obtaining the
Recently, as described in paragraph 2.3, to tackle very small field dosimetry problems, the 3Dose INFN group proposed a bidimensional polycrystalline diamond prototype with columnar electrodes, also known as 3D detector [58]. Thin columnar electrodes, developed inside the bulk of the crystal, were fabricated perpendicular to the detector surface using laser pulses creating small cells (70 × 114 μm−2 × 500 μm). Small sensitive volume pixels (n × 4 10 mm−3) were created connecting more cells in parallel. The basic idea is to develop a highly segmented large polycrystalline diamond dosimeter to obtain complete field profiles in a single measurement, hence reducing the uncertainty of the delivered dose. A first prototype was tested using a clinical 6 MV beam, showing a linear dose response with a maximal deviation from linearity of 2% and a high sensitivity of about 80 nC Gy−1. The diamond detector response did not depend on photon beam energy within a range of 6–10 MV. Authors [58, 59], reported the preliminary results of the 3Dose characterization. 3Dose demonstrated good time stability and repeatability with less than 0.6% signal variation. An array of nine pixels was built, and the response of each pixel studied under a standard 6 MV 10 × 10 cm2 photon beam. Each pixel of the array biased at 10 V presented a different sensitivity to the radiation beam ranging from 25 to 95 nC Gy−1. The signal was linear and stable, allowing for the extraction of the different calibration factors to be applied for the overall detector response. The detector signal rise and fall time were 0.5 and 0.3 s, respectively. The response of 3Dose is therefore sufficiently fast to follow in real-time the radiation beam intensity changes. The dose rate dependence was also studied measuring a
4 Conclusion
Diamond dosimeters are ideal candidates for small field dosimetry, but besides the high-quality material, substrate type, dimensions and geometry, they must exhibit several additional characteristics. When choosing the electrode material, readout system used, and dosimeter housing, some caution is mandatory. Over the years, researchers have developed increasingly better devices. At present, single-crystal diamond dosimeters are commercially available and are routinely used in hospitals with costs comparable to those of other detectors. However, dose measurements in field sizes below 1 cm must be corrected following the international code of practice since measurements are still not accurate enough. Moreover, profile measurements in the penumbra regions performed with single diamond detectors suffer from volume averaging effects while small commercial silicon dosimeters perform better. To overcome these drawbacks diamond detectors of increasingly smaller dimensions have been developed in the last decade; the most promising ones are designed with a three-dimensional graphitic path structure in the diamond bulk, at the same time creating pixels with sufficient sensitive volume and very small size. Large area detectors have also been developed to provide reliable dose maps, which would be very challenging or even impossible using a point-like detector, and, even more difficult, a dose map that varies with time. Polycrystalline pixel matrices, for example, have proven to be adequate for both relative dosimetry and pre-treatment verifications even if attention must be paid to the fabrication of pixel contacts and pixel calibration. Broadly speaking, for radiotherapy applications, an overall trend of evolution is observed towards energy independent all-carbon dosimeters. These new types of dosimeters partially overcome problems such as the reduced polarization voltage, the need for pre-irradiation, and the use of correction factors, but there are still several issues that need to be solved.
Author Contributions
CT was main editor of the review and wrote the following sections: abstract, introductions, Radiotherapy Application, Conclusion. KK wrote the Diamond contacts and Diamond dimensions and electrodes geometry sections. SP collected papers and reviewed the final manuscript. LS wrote Detector read out, housing and conclusion sections and he reviewed the final manuscript. All authors discussed and contributed to the final manuscript.
Funding
This project was funded by INFN Commission V and University of Florence.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
References
1. Baskar R, Lee KA, Yeo R, Yeoh K-W. Cancer and radiation therapy: Current advances and future directions. Int J Med Sci (2012) 9:193–9. doi:10.7150/ijms.3635
2. Das IJ, Ding GX, Ahnesjö A. Small fields: Nonequilibrium radiation dosimetry. Med Phys (2007) 35:206–15. doi:10.1118/1.2815356
3. Looe HK, Harder D, Poppe B. The energy dependence of the lateral dose response functions of detectors with various densities in photon-beam dosimetry. Phys Med Biol (2017) 62:N32–N44. doi:10.1088/1361-6560/aa54aa
4. Andreo P, Palmans H, Marteinsdóttir M, Benmakhlouf H, Carlsson-Tedgren Å. On the monte carlo simulation of small-field micro-diamond detectors for megavoltage photon dosimetry. Phys Med Biol (2015) 61:L1–L10. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/61/1/l1
5. Hartmann GH, Zink K. A monte carlo study on the ptw 60019 microdiamond detector. Med Phys (2019) 46:5159–72. doi:10.1002/mp.13721
6.Fundamentals of Ionizing Radiation Dosimetry. Medical and health physics. New Jersey, NJ: John Wiley and Sons (2017).
7.International Atomic Energy Agency. Dosimetry of small static fields used in external beam radiotherapy. No. 483 in Technical Reports Series (Vienna, Austria: International Atomic Energy Agency) (2017).
8. Alfonso R, Andreo P, Capote R, Huq MS, Kilby W, Kjäll P, et al. A new formalism for reference dosimetry of small and non-standard fields. Med Phys (2008) 35:5179–86. doi:10.1118/1.3005481
9. Parwaie W, Refahi S, Ardekani MA, Farhood B. Different dosimeters/detectors used in small-field dosimetry: Pros and cons. J Med Sig Sens (2018) 8:195. doi:10.4103/jmss.JMSS_3_18
10. Stasi M, Baiotto B, Barboni G, Scielzo G. The behavior of several microionization chambers in small intensity modulated radiotherapy fields. Med Phys (2004) 31:2792–5. doi:10.1118/1.1788911
11. Palmer AL, Dimitriadis A, Nisbet A, Clark CH. Evaluation of gafchromic EBT-XD film, with comparison to EBT3 film, and application in high dose radiotherapy verification. Phys Med Biol (2015) 60:8741–52. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/60/22/8741
12. Talamonti C, Russo S, Pimpinella M, Falco MD, Cagni E, Pallotta S, et al. Community approach for reducing small field measurement errors: Experience over 24 centres. Radiother Oncol (2019) 132:218. doi:10.1016/j.radonc.2018.10.012
13. Russo S, Masi L, Francescon P, Frassanito MC, Fumagalli ML, Marinelli M, et al. Multicenter evaluation of a synthetic single-crystal diamond detector for cyberknife small field size output factors. Physica Med (2016) 32:575. doi:10.1016/j.ejmp.2016.03.005
14. Rosenfeld AB, Biasi G, Petasecca M, Lerch MLF, Villani G, Feygelman V. Semiconductor dosimetry in modern external-beam radiation therapy. Phys Med Biol (2020) 65:16TR01. doi:10.1088/1361-6560/aba163
15. Lam SE, Bradley DA, Khandaker MU. Small-field radiotherapy photon beam output evaluation: Detectors reviewed. Radiat Phys Chem (2021) 178:108950. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2020.108950
17. Yin Z, Hugtenburg RP, Beddoe AH. Response corrections for solid-state detectors in megavoltage photon dosimetry. Phys Med Biol (2004) 49:3691–702. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/49/16/015
18. Bruzzi M, Baldi A, Bartoli A, Cupparo I, Pallotta S, Pasquini A, et al. Large-area segmented polycrystalline cvd diamond for dose mapping in advanced radiotherapy techniques. In: IEEE nuclear science SymposiumMedical imaging conference and room-temperature semiconductor detector workshop. NSS/MIC/RTSD; 29 October–5 November 2016; Strasbourg, France (2016). p. 1–4.
19. Shi J, Simon WE, Zhu TC. Modeling the instantaneous dose rate dependence of radiation diode detectors. Med Phys (2003) 30:2509–19. doi:10.1118/1.1602171
20. Jursinic PA. Dependence of diode sensitivity on the pulse rate of delivered radiation. Med Phys (2013) 40:021720. doi:10.1118/1.4788763
21. Westermark Arndt MJ, Arndt J, Nilsson B, Brahme A. Comparative dosimetry in narrow high-energy photon beams. Phys Med Biol (2000) 45:685–702. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/45/3/308
22. Arndt I, Lapp M, Bohsung J, Gademann G, Harder D. Dosimetric characteristics of a new unshielded silicon diode and its application in clinical photon and electron beams. Med Phys (2005) 32:3750–4. doi:10.1118/1.2124547
23. Onori S, Angelis CD, Fattibene P, Pacilio M, Petetti E, Azario L, et al. Dosimetric characterization of silicon and diamond detectors in low-energy proton beams. Phys Med Biol (2000) 45:3045–58. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/45/10/320
24. Pacilio M, Angelis CD, Onori S, Azario L, Fidanzio A, Miceli R, et al. Characteristics of silicon and diamond detectors in a 60 mev proton beam. Phys Med Biol (2002) 47:N107–12. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/47/8/403
25. Planskoy B. Evaluation of diamond radiation dosemeters. Phys Med Biol (1980) 25:519–32. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/25/3/011
26. Ramkumar S, Buttar CM, Conway J, Whitehead AJ, Sussman RS, Hill G, et al. An assessment of radiotherapy dosimeters based on cvd grown diamond. Nucl. Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2001) 460:401–11. doi:10.1016/s0168-9002(00)01062-7
27. Marczewska B, Kupriyanov I, Pal’yanov Y, Nowak T, Olko P, Rębisz M, et al. A study of radiation dosimeters based on synthetic hpht diamond. Diamond Relat Mater (2007) 16:191–5. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2006.04.009
28.Element 6 (2021): Available at: https://https://www.e6.com/ (Accessed December 10, 2020).
29.Diamond Materials (2021): Available at: https://www.diamond-materials.com/ (Accessed December 10, 2020).
30.II-VI Incorporated (2021): Available at: https://ii-vi.com/ (Accessed December 10, 2020).
31. Spark CDV (2021): Available at: https://cvdspark.com/main/ (Accessed December 10, 2020).
32. Di Venanzio C, Marinelli M, Tonnetti A, Verona-Rinati G, Falco MD, Pimpinella M, et al. Characterization of a microdiamond detector in high-dose-per-pulse electron beams for intra operative radiation therapy. Physica Med (2015) 31:897. doi:10.1016/j.ejmp.2015.06.008
33. O’Brien D, Dolan J, Pencea S, Schupp N, Sawakuchi G. Relative dosimetry with an mr-linac: Response of ion chambers, diamond, and diode detectors for off-axis, depth dose, and output factor measurements. Med Phys (2017) 45:884–97. doi:10.1002/mp.12699
34. Denia P, García M, García C, Higueras J, Blancas N, Alandí J, et al. Comparison of detector performance in small 6 mv and 6 mv fff beams using a versa hd accelerator. PLOS ONE (2019) 14:e0213253. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0213253
35. Smith CL, Montesari A, Oliver CP, Butler DJ. Evaluation of the IAEA‐TRS 483 protocol for the dosimetry of small fields (square and stereotactic cones) using multiple detectors. J Appl Clin Med Phys (2019) 21:98. doi:10.1002/acm2.12792
36. Wegener S, Herzog B, Sauer OA. Detector response in the buildup region of small mv fields. Med Phys (2020) 47:1327. doi:10.1002/mp.13973
37. Burns RC, Chumakov AI, Connell SH, Dube D, Godfried HP, Hansen JO, et al. Hpht growth and x-ray characterization of high-quality type iia diamond. J Phys: Condens Mat (2009) 21:364224. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/21/36/364224
38. Chao F, Zhang Y, Shen W, Sun S, Zhuangfei Z, Xue L, et al. Synthesis and characterization of hpht large single crystal diamonds under the influence of oxygen and hydrogen simultaneously. CrystEngComm (2017) 19:5727–5734. doi:10.1039/C7CE01349C
39. Balmer RS, Brandon JR, Clewes SL, Dhillon HK, Dodson JM, Friel I, et al. Chemical vapour deposition synthetic diamond: Materials, technology and applications. J Phys: Condens Mat (2009) 21:364221. doi:10.1088/0953-8984/21/36/364221
40. Trucchi DM, Cappelli E, Conte G, Mattei G, Gramaccioni C, Ascarelli P. The influence of grain-boundaries on the electronic performance of cvd diamond films. Diamond Relat Mater (2005) 14:575–9. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2004.12.044
41. Berdermann E, Afanaciev K, Ciobanu M, Fischer M, Gsell S, Kiš M, et al. Progress in detector properties of heteroepitaxial diamond grown by chemical vapor deposition on ir/ysz/si(001) wafers. Diamond Relat Mater (2019) 97:107420. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2019.05.006
42. Vikharev AL, Gorbachev AM, Lobaev MA, Radishev DB. Multimode cavity type mpacvd reactor for large area diamond film deposition. Diamond Relat Mater (2018) 83:8. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2018.01.011
43. Yamada H, Chayahara A, Mokuno Y. Method to increase the thickness and quality of diamond layers using plasma chemical vapor deposition under (h, c, n, o) system. Diamond Relat Mater 101 (2019) 107652. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2019.107652
44. Guerrero MJ, Tromson D, Rebisz M, Mer C, Bazin B, Bergonzo P. Requirements for synthetic diamond devices for radiotherapy dosimetry applications. Diamond Relat Mater (2004) 13:2046–51. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2004.07.026
45. Ferrari AC, Robertson J. Interpretation of Raman spectra of disordered and amorphous carbon. Phys Rev B (2000) 61:14095. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.61.14095
46. Lansley S, Betzel G, Baluti F, Reinisch L, Meyer J. Investigation of the suitability of commercially available cvd diamond for megavoltage x-ray dosimetry. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2009a) 607(3):659–67. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2009.06.022
47. Betzel GT, Lansley SP, Mckay D, Meyer J. Reproducibility of cvd diamond detectors for radiotherapy dosimetry. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2012) 691:34–8. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2012.06.034
48. Lagomarsino S, Bellini M, Corsi C, Fanetti S, Gorelli F, Liontos I, et al. Electrical and Raman-imaging characterization of laser-made electrodes for 3d diamond detectors. Diamond Relat Mater (2014) 43: 23–8. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2014.01.002
49. Ade N, Nam TL. The influence of detector size relative to field size in small-field photon-beam dosimetry using synthetic diamond crystals as sensors. Radiat Phys Chem (2015) 113:6. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2015.04.005
50. Galbiati A, Lynn S, Oliver K, Schirru F, Nowak T, Marczewska B, et al. Performance of monocrystalline diamond radiation detectors fabricated using tiw, cr/au and a novel ohmic dlc/pt/au electrical contact. IEEE Trans Nucl Sci (2009) 56:1863–74. doi:10.1109/TNS.2009.2020428
51. Abdel-Rahman MAE, Lohstroh A, Bryant P. Alpha spectroscopy and x-ray induced photocurrent studies of a sc cvd diamond detector fabricated with pld contacts. Radiat Phys Chem (2019) 164:108357. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2019.108357
52. Gil-Tolano MI, Meléndrez R, Álvarez-García S, Soto-Puebla D, Chernov V, Barboza-Flores M. X-ray thermoluminescence dosimetry characterization of commercially available cvd diamond. Phys Sta Solidi A (2018) 215:1800246. doi:10.1002/pssa.201800246
53. Widmann CJ, Müller-Sebert W, Lang N, Nebel CE. Homoepitaxial growth of single crystalline cvd-diamond. Diamond Relat Mater (2016) 64:1. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2015.12.016
54. Bruzzi M, Menichelli D, Sciortino S, Lombardi L. Deep levels and trapping mechanisms in chemical vapor deposited diamond. J Appl Phys (2002) 91:5765. doi:10.1063/1.1461891
55. Girolami M, Bellucci A, Calvani P, Flammini R, Trucchi DM. Radiation-assisted frenkel-poole transport in single-crystal diamond. Appl Phys Lett (2013) 103:083502. doi:10.1063/1.4818904
56. Kanxheri K, Aisa D, Alunni Solestizi L, Bellini M, Caprai M, Corsi C, et al. Intercalibration of a polycrystalline 3d diamond detector for small field dosimetry. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2020) 958:162730. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2019.162730
57. Davis JA, Ganesan K, Prokopovich DA, Petasecca M, Lerch MLF, Jamieson D N, et al. A 3d lateral electrode structure for diamond based microdosimetry. Appl Phys Lett (2017) 110:013503. doi:10.1063/1.4973628
58. Kanxheri K, Servoli L, oh A, Sanchez FM, Forcolin GT, Murphy SA, et al. Evaluation of a 3d diamond detector for medical radiation dosimetry. J Inst (2017) 12:P01003. doi:10.1088/1748-0221/12/01/P01003
59. Kanxheri K, Solestizi LA, Biasini M, Caprai M, Dipilato AC, Iacco M, et al. Investigation of 3d diamond detector dosimetric characteristics. J Inst (2018) 13:P06006. doi:10.1088/1748-0221/13/06/P06006
60. Di Venanzio C, Marinelli M, Milani E, Prestopino G, Verona C, Verona-Rinati G, et al. Characterization of a synthetic single crystal diamond Schottky diode for radiotherapy electron beam dosimetry. Med Phys (2013) 40:021712. doi:10.1118/1.4774360
61. Schirru F, Kisielewicz K, Nowak T, Marczewska B. Single crystal diamond detector for radiotherapy. J Phys D: Appl Phys (2010) 43:265101. doi:10.1088/0022-3727/43/26/265101
62. Marsolat F, Tromson D, Tranchant N, Pomorski M, Le Roy M, Donois M, et al. A new single crystal diamond dosimeter for small beam: Comparison with different commercial active detectors. Phys Med Biol (2013) 58:7647–60. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/58/21/7647
63. Betzel GT, Lansley SP, Baluti F, Reinisch L, Meyer J. Operating parameters of cvd diamond detectors for radiation dosimetry. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2010) 614:130–6. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2009.12.008
64. Tromson D, Rebisz-Pomorska M, Tranchant N, Isambert A, Moignau F, Moussier A, et al. Single crystal cvd diamond detector for high resolution dose measurement for imrt and novel radiation therapy needs. Diamond Relat Mater (2010) 19:1012–6. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2010.03.008
65. Bruzzi M, De Angelis C, Scaringella M, Talamonti C, Viscomi D, Bucciolini M. Zero-bias operation of polycrystalline chemically vapour deposited diamond films for intensity modulated radiation therapy. Diamond Relat Mater (2011) 20:84–92. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2010.11.011
66. Zahradnik IA, Pomorski MT, De marzi L, Tromson D, Barberet P, Skukan N, et al. Sccvd diamond membrane based microdosimeter for hadron therapy. Phys Sta Solidi A (2018) 215:1800383. doi:10.1002/pssa.201800383
67. Talamonti C. High- quality polycrystalline cvd diamond for conformal radiotherapy applications In: 10th International Conference on Large Scale Applications and Radiation Hardness of Semiconductor Detectors; 2011 6 July–8 July; Florence, Italy (2012).
68. Marsolat F, Tromson D, Tranchant N, Pomorski M, Bassinet C, Huet C, et al. Why diamond dimensions and electrode geometry are crucial for small photon beam dosimetry. J Appl Phys (2015) 118:234507. doi:10.1063/1.4937994
69. Konov V, Kononenko T, Kononenko V. Laser micro- and nanoprocessing of diamond materials. Wiley Online Library (2013) 12:385–443. doi:10.1002/9783527648603.ch12
70. Oh A, Caylar B, Pomorski M, Wengler T. A novel detector with graphitic electrodes in cvd diamond. Diamond Relat Mater (2013) 38:9–13. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2013.06.003
71. Koide Y. Metal-diamond semiconductor interface and photodiode application. Appl Surf Sci (2008) 254:6268–72. doi:10.1016/j.apsusc.2008.02.157
72. Volpe P-N, Muret P, Pernot J, Omnès F, Teraji T, Koide Y, et al. Extreme dielectric strength in boron doped homoepitaxial diamond. Appl Phys Lett (2010) 97:223501. doi:10.1063/1.3520140
73. Bellucci A, Orlando S, Caputo D, Cappelli E, Trucchi DM. Dosimetric performance of single-crystal diamond x-ray Schottky photodiodes. IEEE Electron Dev Lett (2013) 34:695. doi:10.1109/LED.2013.2253595
74. Traoré A, Muret P, Fiori A, Eon D, Gheeraert E, Pernot J. Zr/oxidized diamond interface for high power Schottky diodes. Appl Phys Lett (2014) 104:052105. doi:10.1063/1.4864060
75. Makino T, Oyama K, Kato H, Takeuchi D, Ogura M, Okushi H. Diamond electronic devices fabricated using heavily doped hopping p+and n+layers. Jpn J Appl Phys (2014) 53:05FA12. doi:10.7567/JJAP.53.05FA12
76. Volpe P-N, Muret P, Pernot J, Omnès F, Teraji T, Jomard F., et al. High breakdown voltage Schottky diodes synthesized on p-type cvd diamond layer. Phys Stat Sol (A) (2010) 207:2088–92. doi:10.1002/pssa.201000055
77. De Feudis M, Mille V, Valentin A, Brinza O, Tallaire A, Tardieu A, et al. Ohmic graphite-metal contacts on oxygen-terminated lightly boron-doped cvd monocrystalline diamond. Diamond Relat Mater (2019) 92:18. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2018.12.009
78. Gallin-Martel M, Bès A, Boukhemiri A, Bosson G, Collot J, Dauvergne D, et al. Large area polycrystalline diamond detectors for online hadron therapy beam tagging applications In: IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium, Medical Imaging Conference and Room-Temperature Semiconductor Detector Workshop (NSS/MIC/RTSD); 2016 December 15–December 16; Strasbourg, France. IEEE (2016). p. 1–5.
79. Schirru F, Lohstroh A, Jayawardena KDGI, Henley SJ, Sellin PJ. X-ray induced photocurrent characteristics of cvd diamond detectors with different carbon electrodes. J Inst (2013) 8:C12046. doi:10.1088/1748-0221/8/12/C12046
80. Gervino G, Marino C, Silvestri F, Lavagno A, Truc F. Dosimetry with diamond detectors. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2010) 617:230–1. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2009.09.103
81. Betzel GT., Lansley SP, Baluti F, Reinisch L, Meyer J. Clinical investigations of a cvd diamond detector for radiotherapy dosimetry. Physica Med (2012) 28:144–52. doi:10.1016/j.ejmp.2011.04.003
82. Abdel-Rahman MAE, Lohstroh A, Jayawardena I, Henley SJ. The x-ray detection performance of polycrystalline cvd diamond with pulsed laser deposited carbon electrodes. Diamond Relat Mater (2012) 22:70–6. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2011.12.017
83. Velthuis JJ, Page RF, Purves TM, Beck L, Hanifa MAM, Hugtenburg RP. Toward pulse by pulse dosimetry using an SC CVD diamond detector. IEEE Trans. Radiat Plasma Med Sci (2017) 1:527. doi:10.1109/TRPMS.2017.2750799
84. Trucchi DM, Allegrini P, Bellucci A, Calvani P, Galbiati A, Girolami M. Resistant and sensitive single-crystal diamond dosimeters for ionizing radiation. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2013) 718:373. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2012.10.095
85. Trucchi DM, Allegrini P, Calvani P, Galbiati A, Oliver K, Conte G. Very fast and primingless single-crystal-diamond x-ray dosimeters. IEEE Electron Device Lett (2012) 33:615–7. doi:10.1109/LED.2012.2185476
86. Ade N, Nam TL. An evaluation of a novel synthetic diamond probe for dosimetric applications. Radiat Phys Chem (2015) 115:97. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2015.06.013
87. Piliero MA, Hugtenburg RP, Ryde SJS, Oliver K. Development of cvd diamond detectors for clinical dosimetry. Radiat Phys Chem (2014) 104:10–4. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2014.04.030
88. Girolami M, Allegrini P, Conte G, Trucchi DM, Ralchenko VG, Salvatori S. Diamond detectors for uv and x-ray source imaging. IEEE Electron Device Lett. (2012) 33:224–6. doi:10.1109/LED.2011.2176907
89. Fabbri A, Falco MD, Notaristefani FD, Galasso M, Marinelli M, Cencelli VO, et al. Dedicated multichannel readout asic coupled with single crystal diamond for dosimeter application. J Inst (2013) 8:C02042. doi:10.1088/1748-0221/8/02/C02042
90. Bartoli A, Cupparo I, Baldi A, Scaringella M, Pasquini A, Pallotta S, et al. Dosimetric characterization of a 2d polycrystalline cvd diamond detector. J Inst (2017) 12:C03052. doi:10.1088/1748-0221/12/03/C03052
91. Looe HK, Delfs B, Poppinga D, Jiang P, Harder D, Poppe B. The ‘cutting away’ of potential secondary electron tracks explains the effects of beam size and detector wall density in small-field photon dosimetry. Phys Med Biol (2017) 63:015001. doi:10.1088/1361-6560/aa9b46
92. Poppinga D, Delfs B, Meyners J, Langner F, Giesen U, Harder D, et al. Determination of the active volumes of solid-state photon-beam dosimetry detectors using the ptb proton microbeam. Med Phys (2018) 45:3340. doi:10.1002/mp.12948
93. Poppinga D, Kranzer R, Ulrichs AB, Delfs B, Giesen U, Langner F, et al. Three‐dimensional characterization of the active volumes of PTW microDiamond, microSilicon, and Diode E dosimetry detectors using a proton microbeam. Med Phys (2019) 46:4241. doi:10.1002/mp.13705
94. Butler DJ, Beveridge T, Lehmann J, Oliver CP, Stevenson AW, Livingstone J. Spatial response of synthetic microdiamond and diode detectors measured with kilovoltage synchrotron radiation. Med Phys (2018) 45:943. doi:10.1002/mp.12733
95. Looe HK, Poppinga D, Kranzer R, Büsing I, Tekin T, Ulrichs AB, et al. The role of radiation induced charge imbalance on the dose response of a commercial synthetic diamond detector in small field dosimetry. Med Phys (2019) 46:2752. doi:10.1002/mp.13542
96. Marinelli M, Prestopino G, Verona C, Verona-Rinati G. Experimental determination of the ptw 60019 microdiamond dosimeter active area and volume. Med Phys (2016) 43:5205–12. doi:10.1118/1.4961402
97. Biasi G, Hardcastle N, Petasecca M, Guatelli S, Perevertaylo V, Kron T, et al. On the instantaneous dose rate and angular dependence of monolithic silicon array detectors. IEEE Trans Nucl Sci (2019) 66: 519. doi:10.1109/TNS.2018.2885017
98. Kampfer S, Cho N, Combs SE, Wilkens JJ. Dosimetric characterization of a single crystal diamond detector in x-ray beams for preclinical research. Z für Medizinische Physik (2018) 28:303. doi:10.1016/j.zemedi.2018.05.002
99. Brace OJ, Alhujaili SF, Paino JR, Butler DJ, Wilkinson D, Oborn BM, et al. Evaluation of the ptw microdiamond in edge-on orientation for dosimetry in small fields. J Appl Clin Med Phys (2020) 21:278. doi:10.1002/acm2.12906
100. Ade N, Nam TL, Assiamah M. A synthetic diamond probe for both low-energy mammography x-rays and high-energy electron therapy beams. Radiat Phys Chem (2012) 81:232–9. doi:10.1016/j.radphyschem.2011.11.041
101. Bucciolini M, De Angelis C, Talamonti C. Diamond detectors for dosimetry. Diamond Det Dosim (2014) 8:229–48. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-53632-7.00616-X
102. Marczewska B, Nowak T, Olko P, Gajewski W, Pal’yanov Y, Kupriyanov I, et al. Synthetic diamonds as active detectors of ionising radiation. Diamond Relat Mater (2004) 13:918–22. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2003.09.010
103. Bergonzo P, Tromson D, Mer C. Radiation detection devices made from cvd diamond. Semicond Sci Technol (2003) 18:S105–12. doi:10.1088/0268-1242/18/3/315
104. Bruzzi M, Bucciolini M, Cirrone GAP, Cuttone G, Guasti A, Mazzocchi S, et al. Characterization of cvd diamond films as radiation detectors for dosimetric applicationsConference record. 1999 nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference. IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium. Cat. No.99CH37019 (1999).
105. Fidanzio A, Azario L, Venanzi C, Pinzari F, Piermattei A. Production and testing of a synthetic diamond film radiation dosimeter for radiotherapy. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2002) 479:661–7. doi:10.1016/s0168-9002(01)00939-1
106. Lansley S, Betzel G, Meyer J, Baluti F, Reinisch L. Cvd diamond x-ray detectors for radiotherapy dosimetry In: IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science; 2009 25 Oct–Oct 28; Christchurch, New Zealand. IEEE (2009b). p. 1238–43.
107. Manfredotti C. Cvd diamond detectors for nuclear and dosimetric applications. Diamond Relat Mater (2005) 14: 531–40. 10.1016/j.diamond.2004.11.037
108. Almaviva S, Marinelli M, Milani E, Prestopino G, Tucciarone A, Verona C, et al. Chemical vapor deposition diamond based multilayered radiation detector: Physical analysis of detection properties. J Appl Phys (2010) 107:014511. doi:10.1063/1.3275501
109. Tranchant N, Nesladek M, Tromson D, Remes Z, Bogdan A, Bergonzo P. Time of flight study of high performance cvd diamond detector devices. Phys Stat Sol (A) (2007) 204:3023–9. doi:10.1002/pssa.200776342
110. Marsolat F, Tromson D, Tranchant N, Pomorski M, Lazaro-Ponthus D, Bassinet C, et al. Diamond dosimeter for small beam stereotactic radiotherapy. Diamond Relat Mater (2013b) 33:63–70. doi:10.1016/j.diamond.2013.01.003
111. Zani M, Bucciolini M, Casati M, Talamonti C, Marinelli M, Prestopino G, et al. A synthetic diamond diode in volumetric modulated arc therapy dosimetry. Med Phys (2013) 40:092103. doi:10.1118/1.4818256
112. Bartoli A, Scaringella M, Baldi A, Greto D, Scoccianti S, Masi L, et al. Po-0873: 2d pixelated diamond detector for patient qa in advanced radiotherapy treatments. Radiother Oncol (2018), 127:S459–S460. doi:10.1016/s0167-8140(18)31183-6
113. Talamonti C. Advanced diamond dosimeter for quality assurance in radiotherapy. Radiother Oncol (2019) 133:S475–76. doi:10.1016/S0167-8140(19)31318-
114.Implementation of the international Code of Practice on Dosimetry in radiotherapy (TRS 398): Review of testing results. No. 1455 in TECDOC series (CD-ROM) (Vienna, Austria: International Atomic Energy Agency) (2010).
116. De Angelis C, Onori S, Pacilio M, Cirrone GAP, Cuttone G, Raffaele L, et al. An investigation of the operating characteristics of two ptw diamond detectors in photon and electron beams. Med Phys (2002) 29:248–54. doi:10.1118/1.1446101
117. Ciancaglioni I, Marinelli M, Milani E, Prestopino G, Verona C, Verona-Rinati G, et al. Dosimetric characterization of a synthetic single crystal diamond detector in clinical radiation therapy small photon beams. Med Phys (2012) 39:4493–501. doi:10.1118/1.4729739
118. Almaviva S, Ciancaglioni I, Consorti R, De Notaristefani F, Manfredotti C, Marinelli M, et al. Synthetic single crystal diamond dosimeters for intensity modulated radiation therapy applications. Nucl Instr Methods Phys Res Section A: Acc Spectrometers, Detectors Associated Equipment (2009) 608:191–4. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2009.07.004
119. Mancosu P, Reggiori G, Stravato A, Gaudino A, Lobefalo F, Palumbo V, et al. Evaluation of a synthetic single-crystal diamond detector for relative dosimetry on the leksell gamma knife perfexion radiosurgery system. Med Phys (2015) 42:5035–41. doi:10.1118/1.4927569
120. Veselsky T, Novotny J, Pastykova V, Koniarova I. Determination of small field synthetic single-crystal diamond detector correction factors for cyberknife, leksell gamma knife perfexion and linear accelerator. Physica Med (2017) 44:66–71. doi:10.1016/j.ejmp.2017.11.010
121. Woodings SJ, Wolthaus JW, van Asselen B, De Vries J, Kok JG, Lagendijk J, et al. Performance of a ptw 60019 microdiamond detector in a 1.5 t mri-linac. Phys Med Biol (2018) 63:05NT04. doi:10.1088/1361-6560/aaa1c6
122. Azangwe G, Grochowska P, Georg D, Izewska J, Hopfgartner J, Lechner W, et al. Detector to detector corrections: A comprehensive experimental study of detector specific correction factors for beam output measurements for small radiotherapy beams. Med Phys (2014) 41:072103. doi:10.1118/1.4883795
123. Ralston A, Tyler M, Liu P, Mckenzie D, Suchowerska N. Over-response of synthetic microdiamond detectors in small radiation fields. Phys Med Biol (2014) 59:5873–81. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/59/19/5873
124. Underwood TSA, Rowland BC, Ferrand R, Vieillevigne L. Application of the exradin w1 scintillator to determine ediode 60017 and microdiamond 60019 correction factors for relative dosimetry within small mv and fff fields. Phys Med Biol (2015) 60:6669–83. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/60/17/6669
125. Lárraga-Gutiérrez JM, Ballesteros-Zebadúa P, Rodríguez-Ponce M, García-Garduño OA, de la Cruz OOG. Properties of a commercial ptw-60019 synthetic diamond detector for the dosimetry of small radiotherapy beams. Phys Med Biol (2015) 60:905. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/60/2/905
126. Chalkley A, Heyes G. Evaluation of a synthetic single-crystal diamond detector for relative dosimetry measurements on a CyberKnife. Br J Radiol (2014) 87:20130768. doi:10.1259/bjr.20130768
127. Papaconstadopoulos P, Tessier F, Seuntjens J. On the correction, perturbation and modification of small field detectors in relative dosimetry. Phys Med Biol (2014) 59:5937–52. doi:10.1088/0031-9155/59/19/5937
128. Andreo P, Palmans H. Comment on “Experimental determination of the PTW 60019 microDiamond dosimeter active area and volume” [Med. Phys. 43, 5205-5212 (2016)]. Med Phys Medical Phys (2016) 43:6667. doi:10.1118/1.4966023
129. O’Brien D, León Vintró L, Mcclean B. Small field detector correction factors for silicon-diode and diamond detectors with circular 6 mv fields derived using both empirical and numerical methods. Med Phys (2016) 43:411–23. doi:10.1118/1.4938584
130. De Coste V, Francescon P, Marinelli M, Masi L, Paganini L, Pimpinella M, et al. Is the ptw 60019 microdiamond a suitable candidate for small field reference dosimetry? Phys Med Biol (2017) 62:7036–55. doi:10.1088/1361-6560/aa7e59
131. Poppinga D, Delfs B, Meyners J, Harder D, Poppe B, Looe HK. The output factor correction as function of the photon beam field size—direct measurement and calculation from the lateral dose response functions of gas-filled and solid detectors. Z für Medizinische Physik (2018) 28:224. doi:10.1016/j.zemedi.2017.07.006
132. Casar B, Gershkevitsh E, Mendez I, Jurković S, Huq MS. A novel method for the determination of field output factors and output correction factors for small static fields for six diodes and a microdiamond detector in megavoltage photon beams. Med Phys (2019) 46:944–63. doi:10.1002/mp.13318
Keywords: diamond, radiotherapy dosimetry, small field, cvd, polycrystalline, single-cristal, bidimensional dosimeter
Citation: Talamonti C, Kanxheri K, Pallotta S and Servoli L (2021) Diamond Detectors for Radiotherapy X-Ray Small Beam Dosimetry. Front. Phys. 9:632299. doi: 10.3389/fphy.2021.632299
Received: 22 November 2020; Accepted: 15 February 2021;
Published: 16 April 2021.
Edited by:
Tzveta Apostolova, Institute for Nuclear Research and Nuclear Energy, BulgariaReviewed by:
Giuseppe Prestopino, University of Rome Tor Vergata, ItalyDaniele M. Trucchi, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Italy
Giordano Biasi, University of Wollongong, Australia
Copyright © 2021 Talamonti, Kanxheri, Pallotta and Servoli. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: C. Talamonti, cinzia.talamonti@unifi.it