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Technical note: Measurement of the bunch structure of a clinical proton beam using a SiPM coupled to a plastic scintillator with an optical fiber

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BackgroundRecent proposals of high dose rate plans in protontherapy as well as very short proton bunches may pose problems to current beam monitor systems. There is an increasing demand for real-time proton beam monitoring with high temporal resolution, extended dynamic range and radiation hardness. Plastic scintillators coupled to optical fiber sensors have great potential in this context to become a practical solution towards clinical implementation. PurposeIn this work, we evaluate the capabilities of a very compact fast plastic scintillator with an optical fiber readout by a SiPM and electronics sensor which has been used to provide information on the time structure at the nanosecond level of a clinical proton beam. Materials and methodsA 3 x 3 x 3 mm(3) plastic scintillator (EJ-232Q Eljen Technology) coupled to a 3 x 3 mm(2) SiPM (MicroFJ-SMA-30035, Onsemi) has been characterized with a 70 MeV clinical proton beam accelerated in a Proteus One synchrocyclotron. The signal was read out by a high sampling rate oscilloscope (5 GS/s). By exposing the sensor directly to the proton beam, the time beam profile of individual spots was recorded. ResultsMeasurements of detector signal have been obtained with a time sampling period of 0.8 ns. Proton bunch period (16 ns), spot (10 mu s) and interspot (1 ms) time structures could be observed in the time profile of the detector signal amplitude. From this, the RF frequency of the accelerator has been extracted, which is found to be 64 MHz. ConclusionsThe proposed system was able to measure the fine time structure of a clinical proton accelerator online and with ns time resolution.

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This work was funded by Comunidad de Madrid under project B2017/BMD-3888 PRONTO-CM “Protontherapy and nuclear techniques for oncology” and by the Spanish Government and EU Regional Funds (RTI2018-098868-B-I00, RTC-2015-3772-1). A. Espinosa Rodríguez has been funded by a FPU predoctoral fellowship of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (FPU18/02551). This is a contribution for the Moncloa Campus of International Excellence, “Grupo de Física Nuclear-UCM”, Ref. 910059. Part of the calculations of this work were performed in the “Clúster de Cálculo para Técnicas Físicas”, funded in part by Universidad Complutense de Madrid and in part by EU Regional Funds.

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