Jurnal Ilmu Dasar
Vol 23 No 2 (2022)

The Effect of Pattern and Infill Percentage in 3D Printer for Phantom Radiation Applications

Aditya Prayugo Hariyanto (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)
Kurnia Hastu Christianti (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)
Agus Rubiyanto (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)
Nasori Nasori (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)
Mohammad Haekal (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)
Endarko Endarko (Laboratory of Medical Physics and Biophysics, Department of Physics, Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember Surabaya)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 Jul 2022

Abstract

3D printing technology was capable of fabricating phantoms to enhance quality assurance in radiation therapy. The ideal phantom has properties equivalent to the real tissue. However, 3D Printing has the limits to mimicking the attenuation properties of various tissues because during 3D printing there can be only one type of material. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of infill percentage and infill patterns of 3D printing technology to simulate various types of tissue. This study used 25 samples measuring 5 × 5 × 1 cm3 from PETG material. The 20 samples were printed using variations infill percentages from 5 - 100% and the infill pattern in lines. The five samples were then printed with the infill percentage constant at 50% and used the infill pattern triangles, grid, gyroid, octet, and concentric. We used Computed Tomography (CT) to determine the Hounsfield Unit (HU) value for each sample and evaluated the suitability of each sample for phantom applications in radiation therapy and radiology. However, none of the samples was able to simulate compact bone. As a result, we found that PETG material could simulate the properties of soft tissue, fat, lung, kidney, liver, pancreas, and spongy bone. Thus, the study had shown promising potential for the fabrication of the anthropomorphic phantom of radiation therapy.

Copyrights © 2022






Journal Info

Abbrev

JID

Publisher

Subject

Control & Systems Engineering Mathematics

Description

Jurnal ILMU DASAR (JID) is a national peer-reviewed and open access journal that publishes research papers encompasses all aspects of natural sciences including Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Biology. JID publishes 2 issues in 1 volume per year. First published, volume 1 issue 1, in January ...