1 / 16

CERN scintillating microfluidics channels

CERN scintillating microfluidics channels. Hadrotherapy Liquid scintillators Radiation damage Microfluidic technology. Davy Brouzet 3 rd March 2014. CERN scintillating microfluidics channels. I-Radiation and damage II-Temperature effect III-Fluidic consideration and pumping

kyoko
Download Presentation

CERN scintillating microfluidics channels

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CERN scintillating microfluidics channels Hadrotherapy Liquid scintillators Radiation damage Microfluidic technology Davy Brouzet 3rd March 2014

  2. CERN scintillating microfluidics channels I-Radiation and damage II-Temperature effect III-Fluidic consideration and pumping IV-Chemical compatibilities V-Cooling VI-Gantt diagram and objectives

  3. Radioactivity Theory Equivalent dose: Depends on the radiation type (for biological effect) Absorbed dose: J/kg • Radio or hadrotherapy daily doses about 2Gy (2min duration1) • ATLAS: 100Gy/year dose • When passing through matter, particles lose a certain amount in energy via ionization and molecule excitation to higher energy states. • Cherenkov effect: Photon emission when particle velocity higher than light velocity in a specific medium  Widely used for high energy particle detectors but better to avoid in our case •  278 MeV (EJ-309) and 317MeV (EJ-305) Proton hadrotherapy energies between 30 and 250MeV. How about CERN experiments? 1 proton-cancer-treatment.com

  4. Radiation damage in scintillators • Charged particles energy losses (at the ten MeV scale): ≈5% of absorbed energy 2 ≈ 28% of absorbed energy π-electrons Fluorescence Excitation ≈67% of absorbed energy Otherelectrons Thermal dissipation π-electrons Slow scintillation (damage?) • 2 consequences: Diminution of local scintillationand of attenuation length  Light output diminution • Strongly depends on type: Solids  Damaged by low irradiation (50% decrease of light output for anthracene at 10kGy). Sometimes effects at 100-1000Gy. Liquids  60% decrease in scintillation efficiency for BC-505 at 50kGy irradiation. • Energy transfer (and distribution) depends on the nature of the particle (mass, charge and energy)  α-particle>protons>neutrons • No significanteffect of dose rate on radiation damage for the majority of solid and plastic scintillators • Radiation damage of SU-8? Silicon? Ionization Otherelectrons Damage (quenching) 2 See Annex for details

  5. Temperature effect Detection efficiency : Fraction of ionizing particle that produce enough scintillation to be detected • In liquids scintillators, an increase in temperature will induce an higher viscosity and higher light output, especially at high temperatures. Maximum 6% gain for toluene solutions between 25°C and 5°C. • Photomultipliers efficiency can also be increased by a lower temperature! • No reasons that radiation damage should depend on temperature •  Important to keep it below room temperature. Tests should be done on the specific scintillator used to quantify the radiation damage and the temperature effect. Absorption efficiency : Fraction of energy that is absorbed by the liquid Scintillation efficiency : Ratio between produced energy as photons and ionizing particle energy

  6. Irradiation limit assumed for liquid scintillators: 104 Gy Flow rate estimation • In ATLAS, detectors were irradiated at a maximum 100Gy/year dose  100 years without degradation. No pumping needed? • For hadrotherapy (assuming a 2kg tumor [Reference needed]): How much is really absorbed by the liquid?  Depends on particle and energy • Protons energy loss in toluene: 30MeV  17 MeV/cm  1% losses 250MeV  3.5 MeV/cm  0.03% (*With 200μm-depthchannels  ) • 200 Gy/min  0.12 mL/h 2  Pumpingrecommended * 2 See Annex for details

  7. Microfluidic considerations • Pressure difference: • Straight rectangular channel: 3 • Mean fluid velocity: • Flow rate can be multiplied by 2 with 2 liquid entries • If the wanted flow rate is higher (miscalculation or some advantage 4) a geometry change can be considered: Parallel channels would reduce the needed pressure difference by where N is the number of channels. • However, this would require a flow distributor 31.11cP viscosity taken for 1,2,4 trimethylbenzene (different values depending on source) 4 See Annex

  8. Pumping technologies • Positive displacement pumps are adapted to low flow applications • Micropumps Adapted to microfluidic application (not so high pressure difference for really small flow rates)

  9. Chemical compatibilities • Principal liquid scintillators made of xylene (EJ-301), pseudocumene (EJ-305) and ??? (EJ-309) • Chemical compatibilities: Chemical compatibilities.pdf • EJ-301 quite difficult to find adapted materials, especially for O-rings  FKM or FFKM elastomers. Not compatible with PEXIGLAS. • EJ-305 is less toxic and can for example also be used with Viton. • EJ-309 is made of a particular alkyl-benzene. Which one? However, the fact that it is sold with a ‘low chemical toxicity’’ characteristic indicates that it would be more adapted to a pumping use. Optical properties lower than for the EJ-305 (attenuation length divided by 3, higher refractive index, lower light output) • In all the cases, a sealless pump would avoid leakage and thus toxic damages and problems in void conditions.

  10. Cooling • How much energy has to be extracted from liquid: • From radiation thermal excitation (liquid + SU-8 + other materials) • From difference with room temperature (Advection: Not needed if no flow) • Convection process with exterior? Exterior temperature? Void? • From radiation process? • Maximum absorbed dose ~  Taking , and  Doesn’t take into account the heat from the other materials and from the electronic! • Total power to be removed ~ 1W/cm^2 ? 5  Micro-channels cooling has high efficiency and would be perfectly adapted to the microfluidic detectors. Design? 5Micro-channel cooling for HEP particle detectors and electronics

  11. Planning and objectives • See Gantt diagram for planning:Organisation\Gantt Diagram.pdf • Objectives: • Finish bibliography review (oxygen quenching, cooling systems, chemical compatibility of EJ-309…) • Deeper investigation on heat exchanges • Viability of the system both in CERN and hadrotherapy application. • Start design of system (pump choice, mechanical integration, define final flow rate, determine if cooling system is needed and if yes which one) • (Numerical simulation?) • Fabrication of prototype • Tests on radiation damage (and temperature effect) on selected scintillator

  12. Thank you for your attention

  13. References

  14. Annex Flow rate calculation: Fluidicconsiderations: • Velocity profile in the channel: • Boundary layer  Slower flow velocity Liquid longer exposure to radiation. A numerical simulation wouldbenecessary to have some quantitative results(an analytic solution onlyexists for a straight channel) • A quicker flow rate wouldreduce the difference in opticalpropertiesbetween the input and the output

  15. Annex Energy losses distribution: • Birks (1961) has proposedthat the fracton of energydissipated in the π-electron excitation was: whereis the fraction of π-electrons in the molecule. As usuallyequals 0.15 (close to ), • Thosewereresults for 1MeV electrons. Horrocks (1974) presentedresults relation between pulse height for differentparticles. Protons lead to 50% of the pulse heigthobtainedwithelectrons. Therefore, wecan assume that for protons: Results at higherenergiesare necessary to confirmthisresult. • The energydissipated in otherelectron excitation is: • And the energydissipated in the ionizationprocessisthen:

  16. Questions • Energy particle at CERN? Confirm the irradiation found in the CERN report and in Alessandro’s Thesis. • How the total radiation is computed from the light intensity? Is there a calibration to be done? Probably best if the optical properties are the same in all the channels. • Workshop budget? Name of expert for final presentation in September. • Can we organize some meetings every month with Mr. Schiffmann?

More Related