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Journal article

Characterization of a Radiofluorogenic Polymer for Low-Energy Electron Beam Penetration Depth Visualization

From

NanoBio Light-Systems, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark1

Biophotonic Imaging, NanoBio Light-Systems, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark2

Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark3

Dosimetry, Hevesy and Dosimetry, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark4

Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark5

The Danish Polymer Centre, Department of Chemical and Biochemical Engineering, Technical University of Denmark6

Low-energy (80-300 keV) electron beam accelerators are gaining in importance in the radiation processing industry due to their ease of use and wide range of applications (e.g. product surface sterilizations or polymer curing and cross-linking). Due to their very low penetration depth (tens to hundreds of microns), currently used film dosimeters exhibit dose gradients over their thickness and do not resolve the dose response in the first microns of the irradiated material.

Hence, the surface dose, defined as the dose in the first micron D-mu, cannot be measured directly. This study presents a polymer material as a dosimeter candidate for high-dose low-energy electron beam irradiations. The readout of the dose-dependent fluorescence intensity, originating from a pararosaniline dye reaction when irradiated, is measured using fluorescence microscopy.

So far, no in-depth characterization of the material has been performed, leaving the stability and fluorescence properties of the material not fully optimized. We describe the improvements in polymer composition and the fabrication method, and characterize the material properties in terms of the thermal stability, glass transition temperature, refractive index, hardness, rheological behavior, and water affinity.

All of these create a complex set of requirements a polymer needs to fulfill to become an effective dosimeter when measuring using confocal microscopy. The fluorescence readout procedure will be addressed in further studies.

Language: English
Publisher: MDPI AG
Year: 2022
Pages: 1015
ISSN: 20734360
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.3390/polym14051015
ORCIDs: Skowyra, Magdalena Maria , Ankjaergaard, Christina , Yu, Liyun , Lindvold, Lars Rene , Skov, Anne Ladegaard and Miller, Arne

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