Bragg-Curve Simulation of Carbon-Ion Beams for Particle-therapy Applications: a study with the GEANT4 toolkit
M. Kh. Hamad

TL;DR
This study uses the GEANT4 toolkit to simulate carbon-ion beam Bragg curves for particle therapy, validating results with experimental data and analyzing secondary particle contributions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation and validation of Bragg-curve profiles for carbon-ion therapy using GEANT4, including secondary particle spectra and dose distributions in different tissues.
Findings
Simulation results closely match experimental data with 0.02-0.08 cm accuracy.
Bone produces more dose than water and tissue due to secondary doses.
Secondary protons dominate the dose in the tail region.
Abstract
We used the GEANT4 Monte Carlo MC Toolkit to simulate carbon ion beams incident on water, tissue, and bone, taking into account nuclear fragmentation reactions. Upon increasing the energy of the primary beam, the position of the Bragg-Peak transfers to a location deeper inside the phantom. For different materials, the peak is located at a shallower depth along the beam direction and becomes sharper with increasing electron density NZ. Subsequently, the generated depth dose of the Bragg curve is then benchmarked with experimental data from GSI in Germany. The results exhibit a reasonable correlation with GSI experimental data with an accuracy of between 0.02 and 0.08 cm, thus establishing the basis to adopt MC in heavy-ion treatment planning. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov K-S test further ascertained from a statistical point of view that the simulation data matched the experimentally measured…
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