Evaluation of plastic materials for range shifting, range compensation, and solid-phantom dosimetry in carbon-ion radiotherapy
Nobuyuki Kanematsu, Yusuke Koba, and Risa Ogata

TL;DR
This study evaluates the water equivalence of four plastics for use in carbon-ion radiotherapy, focusing on their dosimetric properties and impact on beam range control and phantom measurements.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive comparison of HDPE, PMMA, PET, and POM plastics, highlighting POM as the most water-equivalent material for dosimetry in carbon-ion therapy.
Findings
POM is dosimetrically indistinguishable from water.
HDPE significantly alters the Bragg peak and has poor water equivalence.
PET is superior to PMMA in water equivalence.
Abstract
Purpose: Beam range control is the essence of radiotherapy with heavy charged particles. In conventional broad-beam delivery, fine range adjustment is achieved by insertion of range shifting and compensating materials. In dosimetry, solid phantoms are often used for convenience. These materials should ideally be equivalent to water. In this study, we evaluated dosimetric water equivalence of four common plastics, HDPE, PMMA, PET, and POM. Methods: Using the Bethe formula for energy loss, the Gottschalk formula for multiple scattering, and the Sihver formula for nuclear interactions, we calculated the effective densities of the plastics for these interactions. We experimentally measured variation of the Bragg peak of carbon-ion beams by insertion of HDPE, PMMA, and POM, which were compared with analytical model calculations. Results: The theoretical calculation resulted in slightly…
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