Paul Beasley
Siemens
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Featured researches published by Paul Beasley.
Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2014
William D. Webster; Geoffrey T. Parks; Dmitry Titov; Paul Beasley
INTRODUCTION The field of nuclear medicine is reliant on radionuclides for medical imaging procedures and radioimmunotherapy (RIT). The recent shut-downs of key radionuclide producers have highlighted the fragility of the current radionuclide supply network, however. To ensure that nuclear medicine can continue to grow, adding new diagnostic and therapy options to healthcare, novel and reliable production methods are required. Siemens are developing a low-energy, high-current - up to 10 MeV and 1 mA respectively - accelerator. The capability of this low-cost, compact system for radionuclide production, for use in nuclear medicine procedures, has been considered. METHODOLOGY The production of three medically important radionuclides - (89)Zr, (64)Cu, and (103)Pd - has been considered, via the (89)Y(p,n), (64)Ni(p,n) and (103)Rh(p,n) reactions, respectively. Theoretical cross-sections were generated using TALYS and compared to experimental data available from EXFOR. Stopping power values generated by SRIM have been used, with the TALYS-generated excitation functions, to calculate potential yields and isotopic purity in different irradiation regimes. RESULTS The TALYS excitation functions were found to have a good agreement with the experimental data available from the EXFOR database. It was found that both (89)Zr and (64)Cu could be produced with high isotopic purity (over 99%), with activity yields suitable for medical diagnostics and therapy, at a proton energy of 10MeV. At 10MeV, the irradiation of (103)Rh produced appreciable quantities of (102)Pd, reducing the isotopic purity. A reduction in beam energy to 9.5MeV increased the radioisotopic purity to 99% with only a small reduction in activity yield. CONCLUSION This work demonstrates that the low-energy, compact accelerator system under development by Siemens would be capable of providing sufficient quantities of (89)Zr, (64)Cu, and (103)Pd for use in medical diagnostics and therapy. It is suggested that the system could be used to produce many other isotopes currently useful to nuclear medicine.
5th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'14), Dresden, Germany, June 15-20, 2014 | 2014
Heinrich von Jagwitz-Biegnitz; Paul Beasley; D. Faircloth; Oliver Heid; Thomas Kluge; R. G. Selway
Siemens has proposed a novel compact DC electrostatic tandem accelerator to produce protons of a few MeV and is currently commissioning a prototype at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. The geometry of the accelerator involves large surfaces which are exposed to high electric fields and therefore need long procedures for conditioning. An automated system for conditioning has been developed. It reacts quicker to breakdowns than a human operator could do, thus being more effective and also reduces the time spent by research staff on the conditioning.
Archive | 2008
Christopher Jude Amies; Paul Beasley; Juan Carlos Celi; Oliver Heid; Francisco M. Hernandez-Guerra; Marcel Jan Marie Kruip; Markus Vester
Archive | 2006
Marcel Jan Marie Kruip; Paul Beasley
Applied Energy | 2017
Agustin Valera-Medina; Richard Marsh; Jon Runyon; Daniel Pugh; Paul Beasley; Timothy Hughes; Phil Bowen
Energy Procedia | 2015
Agustin Valera-Medina; Steven Morris; Jon Runyon; Daniel Pugh; Richard Marsh; Paul Beasley; Timothy Hughes
Archive | 2006
Andrew Farquhar Atkins; Paul Beasley; Andrew James Gray
Archive | 2002
Marcel Jan Marie Kruip; Paul Beasley
Archive | 2008
Christopher Jude Amies; Paul Beasley; Juan Carlos Celi; Oliver Heid; Francisco M. Hernandez-Guerra; Marcel Jan Marie Kruip; Markus Dr. Vester
Archive | 2006
Marcel Jan Marie Kruip; Paul Beasley