• Title/Summary/Keyword: heavy ion beam

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Design of cryostat for superconducting quadrupole magnets in In-Flight fragmentation separator

  • Choi, Y.S.;Chang, H.M.;Baudouy, B.;Kim, D.G.;Kim, J.W.
    • Progress in Superconductivity and Cryogenics
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.62-66
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    • 2015
  • The cryostat is designed for the superconducting quadrupole magnets to be used in a heavy-ion accelerator facility. The main accelerator is superconducting linac, which can accelerate a $^{238}U$ beam to 200 MeV/u (Mega electron voltage per nucleon). The cryostat for the magnet employs an innovative design primarily driven by the requirement of the compactness, user-friendliness and reliability. Also, several ancillary requirements such as background field, space restriction due to the beam line and cryostat structure need technical attentions. The development of the cryostat for three quadrupole magnets in the in-flight fragmentation separator is presented in the paper. The concept of cryogenic design is reported and the amount of cryogenic load is estimated by a relevant analysis. The structure of the cryostat to endure the heavy iron yoke including three quadrupole magnets is presented. In addition, the design as well as the performance test of the support link for the cold mass is described.

Carbon-ion radiotherapy in osteosarcoma of the mandible: a case report

  • Ha, Tae-Wook;Park, Slmaro;Youn, Min Yeong;Kim, Dong Wook;Kim, Hyung Jun
    • Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.315-320
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    • 2021
  • Carbon-ion radiotherapy (CIRT) is on the rise as a treatment choice for malignant tumor. Compared to conventional radiotherapy, particle beams have different physical and biological properties. Particle beam provides a low entry dose, deposits most of the energy at the endpoint of the flight path, and forms an asymptotic dose peak (the "Bragg peak"). Compared to protons, carbon with its larger mass decreases beam scattering, resulting in a sharper dose distribution border. We report a 50-year-old male who underwent CIRT without surgical resection on osteosarcoma of the mandible. After CIRT, the patient's pain was gone, and the malignant mass remained stable with accompanying necrosis. Nine months later, however, magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated progression of the left mandibular osteosarcoma with pulmonary metastases. After multidisciplinary discussion, concurrent chemoradiotherapy was conducted. While necrotic bone segments came out of the mandible during subsequent periodic outpatient visits, the tumor itself was stable. Thirty months after his first visit and diagnosis, the patient is waiting for chemotherapy. Although CIRT is superior in treating radioresistant hypoxic disease, CIRT is in its infancy, so care must be taken for its indications and complications.

Characterization of Plants Induced by in vitro Culture of Leaf Blade-segments in a Variegated Tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. BY-4) (Variegated 담배 (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. BY-4)의 잎 절편 배양에 따른 재생 식물체의 특성)

  • 배창휴;이효연
    • Korean Journal of Plant Tissue Culture
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.245-250
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    • 1999
  • Plantlets derived from leaf blade-segment culture of a variegated tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. cv. BY-4) that was induced by a heavy-ion ($^{14}N$) beam irradiation to proembryos, were characterized. When explants from both white and green sections of leaves of the variegated plant were cultured on MS medium containing 0.1 mg/L NAA and 1.0 mg/L BAP, the white sections yielded only white shoots, whereas the green sections generated approximately 47.2% green, 37.4% white and 15.4% variegated shoots. In the F1 generation of a green tobacco derived from the leaf blade-segment culture, the segregation ratio of green to white was 1,651:54. Furthermore, reciprocal crosses showed that all of the progenies was green, indicating that the variegation is not maternally inherited. When the signal intensity of photosynthesis genes was determined by DNA gel blot analysis using the variegated leaves derived from green sections of variegated leaves, there were more of the rbcL, psbA, 16S rDNA and 23S rDNA chloroplast genes in the white sections than the chloroplast genes in wild type and green sections of the variegated plants.

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Comparative Evaluation of Radioactive Isotope in Concrete by Heavy Ion Particle using Monte Carlo Simulation (몬테카를로 시뮬레이션을 통한 중하전입자의 콘크리트 방사화 비교평가)

  • Bae, Sang-Il;Cho, Yong-In;Kim, Jung-Hoon
    • Journal of radiological science and technology
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    • v.44 no.4
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    • pp.359-365
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    • 2021
  • A heavy particle accelerator is a device that accelerates particles using high energy and is used in various fields such as medical and industrial fields as well as research. However, secondary neutrons and particle fragments are generated by the high-energy particle beam, and among them, the neutrons do not have an electric charge and directly interact with the nucleus to cause radiation of the material. Quantitative evaluation of the radioactive material produced in this way is necessary, but there are many difficulties in actual measurement during or after operation. Therefore, this study compared and evaluated the generated radioactive material in the concrete shield for protons and carbon ions of specific energy by using the simulation code FLUKA. For the evaluation of each energy of proton beam and carbon ion, the reliability of the source term was secured within 2% of the relative error with the data of the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory(NSRL), which is an internationally standardized data. In the evaluation, carbon ions exhibited higher neutron flux than protons. Afterwards, in the evaluation of radioactive materials under actual operating conditions for disposal, a large amount of short-lived beta-decay nuclides occurred immediately after the operation was terminated, and in the case of protons with a high beam speed, more radioactive products were generated than carbon ions. At this time, radionuclides of 44Sc, 3H and 22Na were observed at a high rate. In addition, as the cooling time elapsed, the ratio of long-lived nuclides increased. For nonparticulate radionuclides, 3H, 22Na, and for particulate radionuclides, 44Ti, 55Fe, 60Co, 152Eu, and 154Eu nuclides showed a high ratio. In this study, it is judged that it is possible to use the particle accelerator as basic data for facility maintenance, repair and dismantling through the prediction of radioactive materials in concrete according to the cooling time after operation and termination of operation.

Reconstruction of In-beam PET for Carbon therapy with prior-knowledge of carbon beam-track

  • Kim, Kwangdon;Bae, Seungbin;Lee, Kisung;Chung, Yonghyun;An, Sujung;Joung, Jinhun
    • IEIE Transactions on Smart Processing and Computing
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    • v.4 no.6
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    • pp.384-390
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    • 2015
  • There are two main artifacts in reconstructed images from in-beam positron emission tomography (PET). Unlike generic PET, in-beam PET uses the annihilation photons that occur during heavy ion therapy. Therefore, the geometry of in-beam PET is not a full ring, but a partial ring that has one or two openings around the rings in order for the hadrons to arrive at the tumor without prevention of detector blocks. This causes truncation in the projection data due to an absence of detector modules in the openings. The other is a ring artifact caused by the gaps between detector modules also found in generic PET. To sum up, in-beam PET has two kinds of gap: openings for hadrons, and gaps between the modules. We acquired three types of simulation results from a PET system: full-ring, C-ring and dual head. In this study, we aim to compensate for the artifacts that come from the two types of gap. In the case of truncation, we propose a method that uses prior knowledge of the location where annihilations occur, and we applied the discrete-cosine transform (DCT) gap-filling method proposed by Tuna et al. for inter-detector gap.

Degradation of thin carbon-backed lithium fluoride targets bombarded by 68 MeV 17O beams

  • Y.H. Kim;B. Davids;M. Williams;K.H. Hudson;S. Upadhyayula;M. Alcorta;P. Machule;N.E. Esker;C.J. Griffin;J. Williams;D. Yates;A. Lennarz;C. Angus;G. Hackman;D.G. Kim;J. Son;J. Park;K. Pak;Y.K. Kim
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.55 no.3
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    • pp.919-926
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    • 2023
  • To analyze the cause of the destruction of thin, carbon-backed lithium fluoride targets during a measurement of the fusion of 7Li and 17O, we estimate theoretically the lifetimes of carbon and LiF films due to sputtering, thermal evaporation, and lattice damage and compare them with the lifetime observed in the experiment. Sputtering yields and thermal evaporation rates in carbon and LiF films are too low to play significant roles in the destruction of the targets. We estimate the lifetime of the target due to lattice damage of the carbon backing and the LiF film using a previously reported model. In the experiment, elastically scattered target and beam ions were detected by surface silicon barrier (SSB) detectors so that the product of the beam flux and the target density could be monitored during the experiment. The areas of the targets exposed to different beam intensities and fluences were degraded and then perforated, forming holes with a diameter around the beam spot size. Overall, the target thickness tends to decrease linearly as a function of the beam fluence. However, the thickness also exhibits an increasing interval after SSB counts per beam ion decreases linearly, extending the target lifetime. The lifetime of thin LiF film as determined by lattice damage is calculated for the first time using a lattice damage model, and the calculated lifetime agrees well with the observed target lifetime during the experiment. In experiments using a thin LiF target to induce nuclear reactions, this study suggests methods to predict the lifetime of the LiF film and arrange the experimental plan for maximum efficiency.

Monte Carlo Simulation of the Carbon Beam Nozzle for the Biomedical Research Facility in RAON (한국형 중이온 가속기 RAON의 의생물 연구시설 탄소 빔 노즐에 대한 Monte Carlo 시뮬레이션)

  • Bae, Jae-Beom;Cho, Byung-Cheol;Kwak, Jung-Won;Park, Woo-Yoon;Lim, Young-Kyung;Chung, Hyun-Tai
    • Progress in Medical Physics
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.12-17
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    • 2015
  • The purpose of the Monte Carlo simulation study was to provide the optimized nozzle design to satisfy the beam conditions for biomedical researches in the Korean heavy-ion accelerator, RAON. The nozzle design was required to produce $C^{12}$ beam satisfying the three conditions; the maximum field size, the dose uniformity and the beam contamination. We employed the GEANT4 toolkit in Monte Carlo simulation to optimize the nozzle design. The beams for biomedical researches were required that the maximum field size should be more than $15{\times}15cm^2$, the dose uniformity was to be less than 3% and the level of beam contamination due to the scattered radiation from collimation systems was less than 5% of total dose. For the field size, we optimized the tilting angle of the circularly rotating beam controlled by a pair of dipole magnets at the most upstream of the user beam line unit and the thickness of the scatter plate located downstream of the dipole magnets. The values of beam scanning angle and the thickness of the scatter plate could be successfully optimized to be $0.5^{\circ}$ and 0.05 cm via this Monte Carlo simulation analysis. For the dose uniformity and the beam contamination, we introduced the new beam configuration technique by the combination of scanning and static beams. With the combination of a central static beam and a circularly rotating beam with the tilting angle of $0.5^{\circ}$ to beam axis, the dose uniformity could be established to be 1.1% in $15{\times}15cm^2$ sized maximum field. For the beam contamination, it was determined by the ratio of the absorbed doses delivered by $C^{12}$ ion and other particles. The level of the beam contamination could be achieved to be less than 2.5% of total dose in the region from 5 cm to 17 cm water equivalent depth in the combined beam configuration. Based on the results, we could establish the optimized nozzle design satisfying the beam conditions which were required for biomedical researches.

Review of the Existing Relative Biological Effectiveness Models for Carbon Ion Beam Therapy

  • Kim, Yejin;Kim, Jinsung;Cho, Seungryong
    • Progress in Medical Physics
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    • v.31 no.1
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2020
  • Hadron therapy, such as carbon and helium ions, is increasingly coming to the fore for the treatment of cancers. Such hadron therapy has several advantages over conventional radiotherapy using photons and electrons physically and clinically. These advantages are due to the different physical and biological characteristics of heavy ions including high linear energy transfer and Bragg peak, which lead to the reduced exit dose, lower normal tissue complication probability and the increased relative biological effectiveness (RBE). Despite the promising prospects on the carbon ion radiation therapy, it is in dispute with which bio-mathematical models to calculate the carbon ion RBE. The two most widely used models are local effect model and microdosimetric kinetic model, which are actively utilized in Europe and Japan respectively. Such selection on the RBE model is a crucial issue in that the dose prescription for planning differs according to the models. In this study, we aim to (i) introduce the concept of RBE, (ii) clarify the determinants of RBE, and (iii) compare the existing RBE models for carbon ion therapy.