Production of <sup>149</sup>Terbium for Medical Diagnostics and Treatment

POSTER

Abstract

Long-lived radioactive isotopes are used for applications such as cancer diagnostics and treatment. These isotopes must typically satisfy several criteria to be suitable – such as having an appropriate half-life and specific decay properties. We produced 149Tb (t1/2 = 4.1 hrs) by an indirect heavy ion reaction, 141Pr(14N, 6n)149Dy, which subsequently decayed to 149Tb. A 10 MeV/n 14N beam was accelerated by the K150 Cyclotron at Texas A&M University’s Cyclotron Institute and irradiated a Pr6O11 target. The long-lived products produced in this reaction were identified by gamma-rays with a high-purity germanium detector set to measure off-line in one-hour increments over 22 hours. This information was used to measure the original activity of 149Tb at the end of beam and to calculate the reaction cross section. The observed cross section is significantly lower than the theoretical cross section, although this difference has been seen previously in the literature.

*This work has been supported by the NSF through the University of Notre Dame’s Physics REU, Department of Energy Isotopes Program, and as well as Texas A&M University's Cyclotron Institute.

Presenters

  • Mallory McCarthy

    • Texas A&M Univ

Authors

  • Mallory McCarthy

    • Texas A&M Univ
  • John Wilkinson

    • Univ of Notre Dame
  • Sean McGuinness

    • Univ of Notre Dame
  • Shaun Loveless

    • Univ of Alabama - Birmingham
  • Sam Ferran

    • Univ of Alabama - Birmingham
  • Suzanne Lapi

    • Univ of Alabama - Birmingham
  • Graham F Peaslee

    • Univ of Notre Dame