How effective can optical-CT 3D dosimetry be without refractive fluid matching?

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Abstract

Achieving accurate optical CT 3D dosimetry without the use of viscous refractive index (RI) matching fluids would greatly increase convenience. Software has been developed to simulate optical CT 3D dosimetry for a range of scanning configurations including parallel-beam, point and converging light sources. For each configuration the efficacy of 3 refractive media were investigated: air, water, and a fluid closely matched to Presage (RI = 1.00, 1.33 and 1.49 respectively). The results revealed that the useable radius of the dosimeter (i.e. where data was within 2% of truth) reduced to 68% for water-matching, and 31% for dry-scanning in air. Point source incident ray geometry produced slightly more favourable results, although variation between the three geometries was relatively small. The required detector size however, increased by a factor six for dry-scanning, introducing cost penalties. For applications where dose information is not required in the periphery, some dry and low-viscous matching configurations may be feasible.

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Rankine, L., & Oldham. (2013). How effective can optical-CT 3D dosimetry be without refractive fluid matching? In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 444). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/444/1/012065

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