Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where J. Krimmer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by J. Krimmer.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2014

Real-time proton beam range monitoring by means of prompt-gamma detection with a collimated camera

F. Roellinghoff; A. Benilov; D. Dauvergne; George Dedes; N. Freud; Guillaume Janssens; J. Krimmer; J.M. Létang; M. Pinto; D. Prieels; C. Ray; J. Smeets; Frédéric Stichelbaut; E. Testa

Prompt-gamma profile was measured at WPE-Essen using 160 MeV protons impinging a movable PMMA target. A single collimated detector was used with time-of-flight (TOF) to reduce the background due to neutrons. The target entrance rise and the Bragg peak falloff retrieval precision was determined as a function of incident proton number by a fitting procedure using independent data sets. Assuming improved sensitivity of this camera design by using a greater number of detectors, retrieval precisions of 1 to 2 mm (rms) are expected for a clinical pencil beam. TOF improves the contrast-to-noise ratio and the performance of the method significantly.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2014

Assessment and improvements of Geant4 hadronic models in the context of prompt-gamma hadrontherapy monitoring

G. Dedes; M. Pinto; D. Dauvergne; N. Freud; J. Krimmer; J.M. Létang; C. Ray; E. Testa

Monte Carlo simulations are nowadays essential tools for a wide range of research topics in the field of radiotherapy. They also play an important role in the effort to develop a real-time monitoring system for quality assurance in proton and carbon ion therapy, by means of prompt-gamma detection. The internal theoretical nuclear models of Monte Carlo simulation toolkits are of decisive importance for the accurate description of neutral or charged particle emission, produced by nuclear interactions between beam particles and target nuclei. We assess the performance of Geant4 nuclear models in the context of prompt-gamma emission, comparing them with experimental data from proton and carbon ion beams. As has been shown in the past and further indicated in our study, the prompt-gamma yields are consistently overestimated by Geant4 by a factor of about 100% to 200% over an energy range from 80 to 310 MeV/u for the case of (12)C, and to a lesser extent for 160 MeV protons. Furthermore, we focus on the quantum molecular dynamics (QMD) modeling of ion-ion collisions, in order to optimize its description of light nuclei, which are abundant in the human body and mainly anticipated in hadrontherapy applications. The optimization has been performed by benchmarking QMD free parameters with well established nuclear properties. In addition, we study the effect of this optimization on charged particle emission. With the usage of the proposed parameter values, discrepancies reduce to less than 70%, with the highest values being attributed to the nucleon-ion induced prompt-gammas. This conclusion, also confirmed by the disagreement we observe in the case of proton beams, indicates the need for further investigation on nuclear models which describe proton and neutron induced nuclear reactions.


Physical Review C | 2013

Double differential fragmentation cross-section measurements of 95 MeV/u 12C on thin targets for hadrontherapy

J. Dudouet; D. Juliani; J.C. Angélique; B. Braunn; J. Colin; D. Cussol; Ch. Finck; J.M. Fontbonne; H. Gu Erin; P. Henriquet; J. Krimmer; M. Labalme; Marc Rousseau; M.G. Saint-Laurent; S. Salvador

During therapeutic treatment with heavy ions like carbon, the beam undergoes nuclear fragmentation and secondary light charged particles, in particular protons and alpha particles, are produced. To estimate the dose deposited into the tumors and the surrounding healthy tissues, an accurate prediction on the fluences of these secondary fragments is necessary. Nowadays, a very limited set of double di ffential carbon fragmentation cross sections are being measured in the energy range used in hadrontherapy (40 to 400 MeV/u). Therefore, new measurements are performed to determine the double di ffential cross section of carbon on di erent thin targets. This work describes the experimental results of an experiment performed on May 2011 at GANIL. The double di ffential cross sections and the angular distributions of secondary fragments produced in the 12C fragmentation at 95 MeV/u on thin targets (C, CH2, Al, Al2O3, Ti and PMMA) have been measured. The experimental setup will be precisely described, the systematic error study will be explained and all the experimental data will be presented.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2011

Design study of the absorber detector of a compton camera for on-line control in ion beam therapy

M.-H. Richard; M. Dahoumane; D. Dauvergne; M. De Rydt; George Dedes; N. Freud; J. Krimmer; J.M. Létang; X. Lojacono; V. Maxim; G. Montarou; C. Ray; F. Roellinghoff; E. Testa; A.H. Walenta

The goal of this study is to tune the design of the absorber detector of a Compton camera for prompt γ-ray imaging during ion beam therapy. The response of the Compton camera to a photon point source with a realistic energy spectrum (corresponding to the prompt γ-ray spectrum emitted during the carbon irradiation of a water phantom) is studied by means of Geant4 simulations. Our Compton camera consists of a stack of 2 mm thick silicon strip detectors as a scatter detector and of a scintillator plate as an absorber detector. Four scintillators are considered: LYSO, NaI, LaBr3 and BGO. LYSO and BGO appear as the most suitable materials, due to their high photo-electric cross-sections, which leads to a high percentage of fully absorbed photons. Depth-of-interaction measurements are shown to have limited influence on the spatial resolution of the camera. In our case, the thickness which gives the best compromise between a high percentage of photons that are fully absorbed and a low parallax error is about 4 cm for the LYSO detector and 4.5 cm for the BGO detector. The influence of the width of the absorber detector on the spatial resolution is not very pronounced as long as it is lower than 30 cm.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2015

Collimated prompt gamma TOF measurements with multi-slit multi-detector configurations

J. Krimmer; M. Chevallier; J. Constanzo; D. Dauvergne; M. De Rydt; George Dedes; N. Freud; P. Henriquet; C. La Tessa; J.M. Létang; Radek Pleskac; M. Pinto; C. Ray; V. Reithinger; M.-H. Richard; I. Rinaldi; F. Roellinghoff; C. Schuy; E. Testa; M. Testa

Longitudinal prompt-gamma ray profiles have been measured with a multi-slit multi-detector configuration at a 75 MeV/u 13C beam and with a PMMA target. Selections in time-of-flight and energy have been applied in order to discriminate prompt-gamma rays produced in the target from background events. The ion ranges which have been extracted from each individual detector module agree amongst each other and are consistent with theoretical expectations. In a separate dedicated experiment with 200 MeV/u 12C ions the fraction of inter-detector scattering has been determined to be on the 10%-level via a combination of experimental results and simulations. At the same experiment different collimator configurations have been tested and the shielding properties of tungsten and lead for prompt-gamma rays have been measured.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2012

Performance of upstream interaction region detectors for the FIRST experiment at GSI

Z. Abou-Haidar; C. Agodi; M. A. G. Alvarez; M. Anelli; T. Aumann; G. Battistoni; A. Bocci; T.T. Böhlen; A. Boudard; Antonio Brunetti; M. Carpinelli; G.A.P. Cirrone; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; G. Cuttone; M. De Napoli; M. Durante; J.P. Fernández-García; Ch. Finck; M.I. Gallardo; Bruno Golosio; E. Iarocci; Felice Iazzi; G. Ickert; R. Introzzi; D. Juliani; J. Krimmer; N. Kurz; M. Labalme; Y. Leifels; A. Le Fèvre

The FIRST (Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy) experiment at GSI has been designed to study carbon fragmentation, measuring 12C double differential cross sections (∂2σ/∂θ∂E) for different beam energies between 100 and 1000 MeV/u. The experimental setup integrates newly designed detectors in the, so called, Interaction Region around the graphite target. The Interaction Region upstream detectors are a 250 μm thick scintillator and a drift chamber optimized for a precise measurement of the ions interaction time and position on the target. In this article we review the design of the upstream detectors along with the preliminary results of the data taking performed on August 2011 with 400 MeV/u fully stripped carbon ion beam at GSI. Detectors performances will be reviewed and compared to those obtained during preliminary tests, performed with 500 MeV electrons (at the BTF facility in the INFN Frascati Laboratories) and 80 MeV/u protons and carbon ions (at the INFN LNS Laboratories in Catania).


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013

Comparison of two analysis methods for nuclear reaction measurements of 12 C + 12 C interactions at 95 MeV/u for hadrontherapy

J. Dudouet; D. Juliani; M. Labalme; J.C. Angélique; B. Braunn; J. Colin; D. Cussol; Ch. Finck; J.M. Fontbonne; H. Guérin; P. Henriquet; J. Krimmer; M. Rousseau; M.G. Saint-Laurent

During therapeutic treatment with heavier ions like carbon, the beam undergoes nuclear fragmentation and secondary light charged particles, in particular protons and alpha particles, are produced. To estimate the dose deposited into the tumors and the surrounding healthy tissues, the accuracy must be higher than ±3% and±1 mm. Therefore, measurements are performed to determine the double differential cross-section for different reactions. In this paper, the analysis of data from 12C +12C reactions at 95 MeV/u are presented. The emitted particles are detected with ΔEthin−ΔEthick−E telescopes made of a stack of two silicon detectors and a CsI crystal. Two different methods are used to identify the particles. One is based on graphical cuts onto the ΔE−E maps, the second is based on the so-called KaliVeda method using a functional description of ΔE versus E. The results of the two methods will be presented in this paper as well as the comparison between both.


11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (NN2012) | 2013

FIRST experiment: Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy

C. Agodi; Z. Abou-Haidar; M. A. G. Alvarez; T. Aumann; F. Balestra; G. Battistoni; A. Bocci; T.T. Böhlen; M Bondì; A. Boudard; A. Brunetti; M. Carpinelli; F Cappuzzello; M Cavallaro; D Carbone; G.A.P. Cirrone; M. A. Cortés-Giraldo; G. Cuttone; M. De Napoli; Marco Durante; J.P. Fernández-García; C Finck; A Foti; M.I. Gallardo; Bruno Golosio; E. Iarocci; Felice Iazzi; G. Ickert; R. Introzzi; D. Juliani

Nuclear fragmentation processes are relevant in different fields of basic research and applied physics and are of particular interest for tumor therapy and for space radiation protection applications. The FIRST (Fragmentation of Ions Relevant for Space and Therapy) experiment at SIS accelerator of GSI laboratory in Darmstadt, has been designed for the measurement of different ions fragmentation cross sections at different energies between 100 and 1000 MeV/nucleon. The experiment is performed by an international collaboration made of institutions from Germany, France, Italy and Spain. The experimental apparatus is partly based on an already existing setup made of the ALADIN magnet, the MUSIC IV TPC, the LAND2 neutron detector and the TOFWALL scintillator TOF system, integrated with newly designed detectors in the interaction Region (IR) around the carbon removable target: a scintillator Start Counter, a Beam Monitor drift chamber, a silicon Vertex Detector and a Proton Tagger for detection of light fragments emitted at large angles (KENTROS). The scientific program of the FIRST experiment started on summer 2011 with the study of the 400 MeV/nucleon 12C beam fragmentation on thin (8mm) carbon target.


Physics in Medicine and Biology | 2016

Probabilistic models and numerical calculation of system matrix and sensitivity in list-mode MLEM 3D reconstruction of Compton camera images.

V. Maxim; X. Lojacono; E. Hilaire; J. Krimmer; E. Testa; D. Dauvergne; Isabelle E. Magnin; Rémy Prost

This paper addresses the problem of evaluating the system matrix and the sensitivity for iterative reconstruction in Compton camera imaging. Proposed models and numerical calculation strategies are compared through the influence they have on the three-dimensional reconstructed images. The study attempts to address four questions. First, it proposes an analytic model for the system matrix. Second, it suggests a method for its numerical validation with Monte Carlo simulated data. Third, it compares analytical models of the sensitivity factors with Monte Carlo simulated values. Finally, it shows how the system matrix and the sensitivity calculation strategies influence the quality of the reconstructed images.


Medical Physics | 2015

Technical Note: Experimental carbon ion range verification in inhomogeneous phantoms using prompt gammas

M. Pinto; M. De Rydt; D. Dauvergne; George Dedes; N. Freud; J. Krimmer; J.M. Létang; C. Ray; E. Testa; M. Testa

PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to experimentally assess the possibility to monitor carbon ion range variations--due to tumor shift and/or elongation or shrinking--using prompt-gamma (PG) emission with inhomogeneous phantoms. Such a study is related to the development of PG monitoring techniques to be used in a carbon ion therapy context. METHODS A 95 MeV/u carbon ion beam was used to irradiate phantoms with a variable density along the ion path to mimic the presence of bone and lung in homogeneous humanlike tissue. PG profiles were obtained after a longitudinal scan of the phantoms. A setup comprising a narrow single-slit collimator and two detectors placed at 90° with respect to the beam axis was used. The time of flight technique was applied to allow the selection between PG and background events. RESULTS Using the positions at 50% entrance and 50% falloff of the PG profiles, a quantity called prompt-gamma profile length (PGPL) is defined. It is possible to observe shifts in the PGPL when there are absolute ion range shifts as small as 1-2 mm. Quantitatively, for an ion range shift of -1.33 ± 0.46 mm (insertion of a Teflon slab), a PGPL difference of -1.93 ± 0.58 mm and -1.84 ± 1.27 mm is obtained using a BaF2 and a NaI(Tl) detector, respectively. In turn, when an ion range shift of 4.59 ± 0.42 mm (insertion of a lung-equivalent material slab) is considered, the difference is of 4.10 ± 0.54 and 4.39 ± 0.80 mm for the same detectors. CONCLUSIONS Herein, experimental evidence of the usefulness of employing PG to monitor carbon ion range using inhomogeneous phantoms is presented. Considering the homogeneous phantom as reference, the results show that the information provided by the PG emission allows for detecting ion range shifts as small as 1-2 mm. When considering the expected PG emission from an energy slice in a carbon ion therapy scenario, the experimental setup would allow to retrieve the same PGPL as the high statistics of the full experimental dataset in 58% of the times. However, this success rate increases to 93% when using a better optimized setup by means of Monte Carlo simulations.

Collaboration


Dive into the J. Krimmer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Roellinghoff

Université catholique de Louvain

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ch. Finck

University of Strasbourg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge