Ion track reconstruction in 3D using alumina-based fluorescent nuclear track detectors
Martin Niklas, James A. Bartz, Mark S. Akselrod, Amir Abollahi, Oliver, J\"akel, Steffen Greilich

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that alumina-based fluorescent nuclear track detectors (FNTDs) can accurately reconstruct 3D ion tracks, enabling detailed radiobiological investigations at the sub-cellular level in proton and heavy ion therapies.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method for 3D ion track reconstruction in FNTDs with high accuracy, considering the effects of irradiation angle and signal complexity.
Findings
Perpendicular irradiation yields errors smaller than 0.10° in 3D track reconstruction.
FNTDs can be used to link physical ion tracks with biological responses at the cellular level.
The accuracy of track reconstruction depends on irradiation angle and signal complexity.
Abstract
Fluorescent nuclear track detectors (FNTDs) based on Al2O3:C,Mg single crystal combined with confocal microscopy provide 3D information on ion tracks with a resolution only limited by light diffraction. FNTDs are also ideal substrates to be coated with cells to engineer cell-fluorescent ion track hybrid detectors. This radiobiological tool enables a novel platform linking cell responses to physical dose deposition on a sub-cellular level in proton and heavy ion therapies. To achieve spatial correlation between single ion hits in the cell coating and its biological response the ion traversals have to be reconstructed in 3D using the depth information gained by the FNTD read-out. FNTDs were coated with a confluent human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial cell layer. Carbon ion irradiation of the hybrid detector was performed perpendicular and angular to the detector surface. In-situ imaging…
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