[论文解读] Non-Destructive Beam Monitoring via Secondary Radiation Detection with Ce-Doped Silica Fibers
论文评估了一种外部 Ce 掺杂二氧化硅光纤监测器(EFM),通过检测二次辐射来监测医疗回旋加速器 beamline 上的束流强度、损失和位置,而不对束流进行干预。
Non-destructive beam diagnostics are essential for low-energy medical cyclotrons, where even thin interceptive devices can severely degrade beam quality. We investigate an external fiber monitor (EFM) based on Ce-doped silica scintillating fibers that detects secondary radiation generated at existing beamline components of the 18 MeV Bern Medical Cyclotron beam transfer line (BTL). Three use cases were studied: (i) beam intensity monitoring around an electrically isolated, water-cooled beam dump; (ii) beam-loss monitoring around a 10 mm collimator under varying the beam focusing; and (iii) by steering a 6.5 mm $ imes$ 6.5 mm beam spot on a beam dump. For case (i), the summed EFM signal exhibits a linear dependence on the current on target over nearly three orders of magnitude. In case (ii), a normalized EFM-based beam-loss proxy scales monotonically with an electrical loss proxy across several focusing settings. Furthermore, opposing-fiber signal ratios provide decoupled, monotonic sensitivity to horizontal and vertical beam displacements.
研究动机与目标
- Motivate non-destructive beam diagnostics for low-energy medical cyclotrons where interceptive devices perturb the beam.
- Evaluate the external fiber monitor (EFM) concept using Ce-doped silica fibers to detect secondary radiation around existing beamline components.
- Characterize EFM performance for three use cases: beam intensity monitoring, beam-loss monitoring, and beam-position monitoring.
- Assess linearity, calibration, and potential systematics to inform retrofitting and routine operation.
提出的方法
- Utilize Ce-doped silica fibers mounted around beamline components to convert secondary radiation into scintillation light.
- Route light to an external readout chain comprising an IDQ single-photon detector and a Vertilon eight-channel counter system.
- Test three configurations on the Bern Medical Cyclotron beam transfer line: (i) around a water-cooled beam dump for linearity, (ii) around a collimator for beam loss, (iii) around a beam dump with an array for position sensing.
- Compare EFM signals against reference measurements such as beam dump current, UniBEaM profiles, and Pi2 beam profiler to establish correlations.
- Use background-subtracted signals and, where relevant, derive proxies (e.g., S_I, S_EFM) for calibration in loss scenarios.

实验结果
研究问题
- RQ1Can the EFM provide a linear, non-destructive response to beam current over a broad range?
- RQ2Is the EFM signal correlated monotonically with beam losses at a collimator under varying focusing conditions?
- RQ3Can an opposing-fiber array yield decoupled, monotonic sensitivity to horizontal and vertical beam displacement?
- RQ4How do geometry, materials, and activation affect the EFM response and required site-specific calibration?
主要发现
- The summed EFM signal shows a linear dependence on beam current over nearly three orders of magnitude with small residual drift within ±3%.
- A beam-loss proxy from EFM signals scales monotonically with an electrical loss proxy across several focusing settings, enabling empirical calibration to infer losses.
- Opposing-fiber signal ratios provide decoupled, monotonic sensitivity to horizontal and vertical beam displacements.
- The EFM is non-interceptive and retrofit-friendly, suitable for continuous monitoring without perturbing the beam, given site-specific calibration.
- A second-order limitation notes geometry- and material-dependence of the response, requiring careful calibration and potential background mitigation.

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