Cargando…

Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy

An isocentric superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy is being developed [ 1]. This rotating gantry can transport heavy ions having 430 MeV/u to an isocenter with irradiation angles of over ±180°, and is further capable of performing fast raster-scanning irradiation [ 2]. A layout of t...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Iwata, Yoshiyuki, Noda, K., Murakami, T., Shirai, T., Furukawa, T., Fujita, T., Mori, S., Sato, S., Mizushima, K., Shouda, K., Fujimoto, T., Arai, H., Ogitsu, T., Obana, T., Amemiya, N., Orikasa, T., Takami, S., Takayama, S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3941506/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrr/rrt205
_version_ 1782305933841399808
author Iwata, Yoshiyuki
Noda, K.
Murakami, T.
Shirai, T.
Furukawa, T.
Fujita, T.
Mori, S.
Sato, S.
Mizushima, K.
Shouda, K.
Fujimoto, T.
Arai, H.
Ogitsu, T.
Obana, T.
Amemiya, N.
Orikasa, T.
Takami, S.
Takayama, S.
author_facet Iwata, Yoshiyuki
Noda, K.
Murakami, T.
Shirai, T.
Furukawa, T.
Fujita, T.
Mori, S.
Sato, S.
Mizushima, K.
Shouda, K.
Fujimoto, T.
Arai, H.
Ogitsu, T.
Obana, T.
Amemiya, N.
Orikasa, T.
Takami, S.
Takayama, S.
author_sort Iwata, Yoshiyuki
collection PubMed
description An isocentric superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy is being developed [ 1]. This rotating gantry can transport heavy ions having 430 MeV/u to an isocenter with irradiation angles of over ±180°, and is further capable of performing fast raster-scanning irradiation [ 2]. A layout of the beam-transport line for the compact rotating-gantry is presented in Fig. 1. The rotating gantry has 10 superconducting magnets (BM01-10), a pair of the scanning magnets (SCM-X and SCM-Y) and two pairs of beam profile- monitor and steering magnets (ST01-02 and PRN01-02). For BM01-BM06 and BM09-BM10, the combined-function superconducting magnets are employed. Further, these superconducting magnets are designed for fast slewing of the magnetic field to follow the multiple flattop operation of the synchrotron [ 3]. The use of the combined-function superconducting magnets with optimized beam optics allows a compact gantry design with a large scan size at the isocenter; the length and the radius of the gantry will be to be ∼13 and 5.5 m, respectively, which are comparable to those for the existing proton gantries. Furthermore, the maximum scan size at the isocenter is calculated to be as large as ∼200 mm square for heavy-ion beams at the maximum energy of 430 MeV/u. All of the superconducting magnets were designed, and their magnetic fields were calculated using the Opera-3d code [ 4]. With the calculated magnetic fields, beam-tracking simulations were made. The simulation results agreed well with those of the linear beam-optics calculation, proving validity of the final design for the superconducting magnets. The five out of 10 superconducting magnets, as well as the model magnet were currently manufactured. With these magnets, rotation tests, magnetic field measurements and fast slewing tests were conducted. However, we did not observe any significant temperature increase, which may cause a quench problem. Further, results of the magnetic field measurements roughly agreed with those calculated by the Opera-3d code. The design study as well as major tests of the superconducting magnets was completed, and the construction of the superconducting rotating-gantry is in progress. The construction of the superconducting rotating-gantry will be completed at the end of FY2014, and be commissioned within FY2015.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3941506
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39415062014-03-04 Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy Iwata, Yoshiyuki Noda, K. Murakami, T. Shirai, T. Furukawa, T. Fujita, T. Mori, S. Sato, S. Mizushima, K. Shouda, K. Fujimoto, T. Arai, H. Ogitsu, T. Obana, T. Amemiya, N. Orikasa, T. Takami, S. Takayama, S. J Radiat Res Oral Session 04: Facilities of Ion Beam Cancer Therapy An isocentric superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy is being developed [ 1]. This rotating gantry can transport heavy ions having 430 MeV/u to an isocenter with irradiation angles of over ±180°, and is further capable of performing fast raster-scanning irradiation [ 2]. A layout of the beam-transport line for the compact rotating-gantry is presented in Fig. 1. The rotating gantry has 10 superconducting magnets (BM01-10), a pair of the scanning magnets (SCM-X and SCM-Y) and two pairs of beam profile- monitor and steering magnets (ST01-02 and PRN01-02). For BM01-BM06 and BM09-BM10, the combined-function superconducting magnets are employed. Further, these superconducting magnets are designed for fast slewing of the magnetic field to follow the multiple flattop operation of the synchrotron [ 3]. The use of the combined-function superconducting magnets with optimized beam optics allows a compact gantry design with a large scan size at the isocenter; the length and the radius of the gantry will be to be ∼13 and 5.5 m, respectively, which are comparable to those for the existing proton gantries. Furthermore, the maximum scan size at the isocenter is calculated to be as large as ∼200 mm square for heavy-ion beams at the maximum energy of 430 MeV/u. All of the superconducting magnets were designed, and their magnetic fields were calculated using the Opera-3d code [ 4]. With the calculated magnetic fields, beam-tracking simulations were made. The simulation results agreed well with those of the linear beam-optics calculation, proving validity of the final design for the superconducting magnets. The five out of 10 superconducting magnets, as well as the model magnet were currently manufactured. With these magnets, rotation tests, magnetic field measurements and fast slewing tests were conducted. However, we did not observe any significant temperature increase, which may cause a quench problem. Further, results of the magnetic field measurements roughly agreed with those calculated by the Opera-3d code. The design study as well as major tests of the superconducting magnets was completed, and the construction of the superconducting rotating-gantry is in progress. The construction of the superconducting rotating-gantry will be completed at the end of FY2014, and be commissioned within FY2015. Oxford University Press 2014-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3941506/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrr/rrt205 Text en © The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Japan Radiation Research Society and Japanese Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Oral Session 04: Facilities of Ion Beam Cancer Therapy
Iwata, Yoshiyuki
Noda, K.
Murakami, T.
Shirai, T.
Furukawa, T.
Fujita, T.
Mori, S.
Sato, S.
Mizushima, K.
Shouda, K.
Fujimoto, T.
Arai, H.
Ogitsu, T.
Obana, T.
Amemiya, N.
Orikasa, T.
Takami, S.
Takayama, S.
Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title_full Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title_fullStr Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title_full_unstemmed Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title_short Development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
title_sort development of a compact superconducting rotating-gantry for heavy-ion therapy
topic Oral Session 04: Facilities of Ion Beam Cancer Therapy
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3941506/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrr/rrt205
work_keys_str_mv AT iwatayoshiyuki developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT nodak developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT murakamit developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT shirait developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT furukawat developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT fujitat developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT moris developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT satos developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT mizushimak developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT shoudak developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT fujimotot developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT araih developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT ogitsut developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT obanat developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT amemiyan developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT orikasat developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT takamis developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy
AT takayamas developmentofacompactsuperconductingrotatinggantryforheavyiontherapy