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Visible radiophotoluminescence of colour centres in lithium fluoride: From lasers to versatile radiation sensors

TitleVisible radiophotoluminescence of colour centres in lithium fluoride: From lasers to versatile radiation sensors
Publication TypePresentazione a Congresso
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsMontereali, Maria Rita, Bonfigli F., Nichelatti E., Nigro V., Piccinini M., and Vincenti M.A.
Conference NameJournal of Physics: Conference Series
KeywordsColour centers, Dosimeters, dosimetry, Fluorine Compounds, Laser bands, light, Light emission, Lithium Fluoride, Lithium fluoride crystals, Optically pumped, Photoluminescence characteristics, Photonic devices, Polycrystalline thin film, Proton beams, Pumping (laser), Radiation sensors, Radiation-Induced, Thin films, Tuneable laser, X ray detectors
Abstract

The peculiar photoluminescence characteristics of radiation-induced colour centres in lithium fluoride (LiF), well known for applications in optically-pumped tuneable lasers and broad-band miniaturised light-emitting photonic devices operating at room-temperature, are under exploitation in passive imaging detectors and dosimeters based on visible radiophotoluminescence in LiF crystals and polycrystalline thin films. Their high intrinsic spatial resolution, wide dynamic range and large field of view, combined with easy handling, ambient-light operation and no development need, allow to successfully extend their use from X-ray imaging to proton-beam advanced diagnostics and dosimetry, even at those low dose values that are typical of hadrontherapy. After exposure, the latent images stored in LiF as local formations of F2 and F3+ aggregate defects are read with an optical fluorescence microscope under illumination in the blue spectral range. Their visible emission intensity was found to be linearly proportional to the dose over at least three orders of magnitude, so that bi-dimensional LiF solid-state dosimeters based on spectrally-integrated radiophotoluminescence reading can be envisaged. Taking advantage of the low thickness of LiF thin films, transversal proton beam dose mapping was demonstrated at low proton energies, even at high doses. Recent results and advances concerning LiF crystals and polycrystalline thin film characterisation in the linearity range are presented and discussed with the aim of highlighting challenges related to increasing the LiF film detector radiation sensitivity to both particles (protons) and photons (X-rays), although therapeutic dose values typical of clinical radiotherapy are still a big challenge. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85137593920&doi=10.1088%2f1742-6596%2f2298%2f1%2f012001&partnerID=40&md5=e047fa957aa2ebbf6b9b4fcdcfaa1280
DOI10.1088/1742-6596/2298/1/012001
Citation KeyMontereali2022