Compact dose delivery of laser-accelerated high-energy electron beams towards radiotherapy applications
Bing Zhou, Zhiyuan Guo, Yang Wan, Shuang Liu, Jianfei Hua, Wei Lu

TL;DR
This paper proposes a simple, magnet-based dose delivery scheme for laser-accelerated high-energy electron beams, enabling precise, deep-seated tumor irradiation with reduced entrance dose, advancing VHEE radiotherapy practicality.
Contribution
It introduces a two-dipole magnet system for compact, controllable delivery of LWFA-based VHEE beams, insensitive to energy spread, for deep tumor targeting in radiotherapy.
Findings
Beam guidance achieved up to 20 cm depth in water phantom.
Dose peak position controlled precisely in lateral and longitudinal directions.
Uniform dose peaks generated by weighted sum of beams at different depths.
Abstract
The use of very high energy electron (VHEE) beams for radiotherapy has been actively studied for over two decades due to their advantageous dose distribution, deep penetration depth and great potential of ultra-high dose-rate irradiation. Recently, laser-plasma wakefield accelerator (LWFA) has emerged as a promising method for the compact generation of VHEE beams, due to its substantially higher accelerating gradients compared to traditional radio-frequency accelerators. However, how to compactly deliver the LWFA-based VHEE beams of relatively large energy spread and create a maximum dose deeply inside the body remains very challenging. In this article, we present a simple dose delivery scheme utilizing only two dipole magnets for LWFA-based VHEE treatment. By adjusting the magnet strengths, the electron beams can be guided along different angular trajectories towards a precise position…
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