From Beam to Bedside: Reinforcing Domestic Supply of $^{99}$Mo/$^{99m}$Tc using Novel High-Current D+ Cyclotrons for Compact Neutron Generation and $^{99}$Mo Production
Jarrett Moon, Daniel Winklehner, Jose Alonso, Claire Huchthausen, David McClain, and Janet Conrad

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel high-current cyclotron design capable of producing sufficient neutrons for local $^{99}$Mo/$^{99m}$Tc isotope generation, potentially decentralizing medical isotope supply chains and reducing reliance on nuclear reactors.
Contribution
It introduces a new cyclotron design originally for neutrino experiments that can produce neutrons for isotope manufacturing, offering a decentralized alternative to reactor-based production.
Findings
Simulations show the cyclotron can produce ~10^13 neutrons/sec.
Design minimizes activation and safety concerns.
Potential for hospital-based isotope generation.
Abstract
Technetium-99m (Tc) is essential to more than 16 million diagnostic procedures performed annually in the United States. It is typically acquired on-site from generators containing Mo, in turn produced at nuclear reactor facilities. This supply chain involves multiple points of vulnerability, which can lead to shortages and delays with potentially negative patient outcomes. We report on the development of a new family of cyclotrons originally designed for the IsoDAR neutrino experiment, capable of operating at much higher current than typical cyclotrons. When operated with deuterons at 1.5 MeV/amu and an anticipated continuous beam current of 5 mA, simulations project that such a system would yield 10 neutrons per second using a thin beryllium target. This neutron yield is sufficient, in principle, to support Mo production without the use of highly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiopharmaceutical Chemistry and Applications · Boron Compounds in Chemistry · Chemical Reactions and Isotopes
