Investigation of the quinine sulfate dihydrate spectral properties and its effects on Cherenkov dosimetry
Emilie Jean, Marie-Eve Delage, Luc Beaulieu

TL;DR
This study quantifies how quinine sulfate dihydrate converts Cherenkov emission to isotropic fluorescence, enhancing light output in dosimetry, and confirms its potential to improve dose measurement accuracy.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral analysis demonstrating quinine's role in converting Cherenkov light to fluorescence, improving understanding of its effects on dosimetry.
Findings
52.4% of visible light from quinine emission at 6 MV
Quinine fluorescence accounts for over half of the signal at 23 MV
Fluorescence enhances the correlation between light output and dose
Abstract
Recent studies have proposed that adding quinine to water while performing Cherenkov volumetric dosimetry improves the skewed percent depth dose measurement. The aim of this study was to quantify the ability of quinine to convert directional Cherenkov emission to isotropic fluorescence and evaluate its contribution to the total emitted light. Aqueous solutions of quinine were prepared with distilled water at various concentrations (0.01 to 1.2 g/L). The solutions were irradiated with photon beams at 6 and 23 MV. The dependence of the light produced as a function of sample concentration was studied using a spectrometer with a fixed integration time. Spectral measurements of the luminescent solution and the blank solution (distilled water only) were taken to deconvolve the Cherenkov and quinine contribution to the overall emission spectrum. Using a CCD camera, intensity profiles were…
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