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Introduction to Health Physics Chapter 9 Health Physics Instrumentation

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Title: Introduction to Health Physics Chapter 9 Health Physics Instrumentation


1
Introduction to Health PhysicsChapter 9Health
Physics Instrumentation
2
RADIATION DETECTORS
  • Instruments used in the practice of health
    physics serve a wide variety of purposes
  • one finds instruments designed specifically for
    the measurement of a certain type of radiation,
    such as low-energy X-rays, high-energy gamma
    rays. fast neutrons, and so on

3
RADIATION DETECTORS
  • The basic requirement of any such instrument is
    that its detector interact with the radiation in
    such a manner that the magnitude of the
    instrument's response is proportional to the
    radiation effect or radiation property being
    measured

4
Radiation Measurement Principles
Signal ?? Physical ?? Chemical ?? Biological ??
Amplification ??
Reader ??
Detector ???
Assessment ??
5
RADIATION DETECTORS
6
PARTICLE-COUNTING INSTRUMENTS
  • Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • variable voltage source V, high-valued resistor R
  • a gas-filled counting chamber D, which has two
    coaxial electrodes that are very well insulated
    from each other
  • All the capacitance associated with the circuit
    is indicated by the capacitor C

7
PARTICLE-COUNTING INSTRUMENTS
  • Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • If the time constant RC of the detector circuit
    is much greater than the time required for the
    collection of all the ions resulting from the
    passage of a single particle through the
    detector, then a voltage pulse of magnitude

8
PARTICLE-COUNTING INSTRUMENTS
  • Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • A broad-output pulse would make it difficult to
    separate successive pulses.
  • if the time constant of the detector circuit is
    made much smaller than the time required to
    collect all the ions. This pulse, allows
    individual pulses to be separated and counted

9
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Ionization Chamber Counter
  • the range of voltage great enough to collect the
    ions before a significant fraction of them can
    recombine yet not great enough to accelerate the
    ions sufficiently to produce secondary ionization
    by collision
  • The exact value of this voltage is a function of
    the type of gas, the gas pressure, and the size
    and geometric arrangement of the electrodes

10
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Ionization Chamber Counter
  • the number of electrons collected by the anode
    will be equal to the number produced by the
    primary ionizing particle
  • the gas amplification factor is equal to one
  • The pulse size from a counter depends on the
    number of ions produced in the chamber makes it
    possible to use this instrument to distinguish
    between radiations of different specific
    ionization

11
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Ionization Chamber Counter
  • disadvantages the relatively feeble output pulse

12
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Proportional Counter
  • As the voltage across the counter is increased
    beyond the ionization chamber region, a point is
    reached where secondary electrons are produced by
    collision. This multiplication of ions in the
    gas, which is called an avalanche
  • The output voltage pulse is proportional to the
    high voltage across the detector
  • The pulse size dependence on ionization for the
    purpose of distinguishing between radiations

13
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Proportional Counter
  • The gas amplification factor is greater than one
  • to use a very stable high-voltage power supply
  • the gas amplification depends on
  • the diameter of the collecting electrode
  • the gas pressure

14
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Geiger Counter
  • increase the high voltage beyond the proportional
    region will eventually cause the avalanche to
    extend along the entire length of the anode
  • the size of all pulses - regardless of the nature
    of the primary ionizing particle- is the same
  • When operated in the Geiger region, therefore, a
    counter cannot distinguish among the several
    types of radiations

15
Geiger-Muller Counter
16
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Geiger Counter
  • avalanche

ionization
17
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Quenching a Geiger Counter
  • After the primary Geiger discharge is terminated,
    the positive ions slowly drift away from the
    anode wire and ultimately arrive at the cathode
    or outer wall of the counter. Here they are
    neutralized by combining with an electron from
    the cathode surface. In this process, an amount
    of energy equal to the ionization energy of the
    gas minus the energy required to extract the
    electron from the cathode surface (the work
    function) is liberated. If this liberated energy
    also exceeds the cathode work function, it is
    energetically possible for another free electron
    to emerge from the cathode surface---and thereby
    produce a spurious count

18
Gas-Filled Particle Counters
  • Quenching a Geiger Counter
  • Prevention of such spurious counts is called
    quenching
  • External quenching
  • electronically, by lowering the anode voltage
    after a pulse until all the positive ions have
    been collected
  • Internal quenching
  • chemically, by using a self-quenching gas

19
Resolving Time
  • The negative ions, being electrons, move very
    rapidly and are soon collected, while the massive
    positive ions are relatively slow-moving and
    therefore travel for a relatively long period of
    time before being collected
  • These slow-moving positive ions form a sheath
    around the positively charged anode, thereby
    greatly decreasing the electric field intensity
    around the anode and making it impossible to
    initiate an avalanche by another ionizing
    particle. As the positive ion sheath moves toward
    the cathode, the electric field intensity
    increases, until a point is reached when another
    avalanche could be started

20
Resolving Time
  • dead time
  • The time required to attain this electric field
    intensity
  • recovery time
  • the time interval between the dead time and the
    time of full recovery
  • resolving time
  • The sum of the dead time and the recovery time

21
Resolving Time
  • dead time, recovery time, resolving time

22
Resolving Time
  • Measurement of Resolving Time
  • the "true counting rate
  • the observed counting rate of a sample is R0

23
Scintillation Counters
  • A scintillation detector is a transducer that
    changes the kinetic energy of an ionizing
    particle into a flash of light

24
Scintillation Counters
  • Whereas the inherent detection efficiency of
    gas-filled counters is close to 100 for those
    alphas or betas that enter the counter, their
    detection efficiency for gamma rays is very
    low-usually less than 1
  • Solid scintillating crystals have high detection
    efficiencies for gamma rays

25
Scintillation Counters
26
Scintillation Counters
Photomultiplier Tube ???
scintillator ???
PM Tube
27
Semiconductor Detector
  • A semiconductor detector acts as a solid-state
    ionization chamber
  • The operation of a semiconductor radiation
    detector depends on its having either an excess
    of electrons or an excess of holes.
  • A semiconductor with an excess of electrons is
    called an n-type semiconductor, while one with an
    excess of holes is called a p-type semiconductor

28
Semiconductor Detectors
29
DOSE-MEASURING INSTRUMENTS
  • Radiation flux VS radiation dose rate
  • Example 9.2
  • Consider two radiation fields of equal energy
    density. In one case, we have 0.1-MeV photon
    flux of 2000 photons per cm2/s. In the second
    case, the photon energy is 2- MeV and the flux is
    100 photons per cm2/s. The energy absorption
    coefficient for muscle for 0.1-MeV gamma
    radiation is 0.0252 cm2/g for 2-MeV gamma the
    energy absorption coefficient is 0.0257 cm2/g.
    The dose rates for the two radiation fields are
    given by

30
?????????
???
????? ?????
????
31
Ionization Chamber Dosimeter
Personal Pen Dosimeter ???????
Diagnostic IC ??????
Therapeutic IC ??????
Survey meter ?????
32
Film Dosimeters
OD
Dose (log)
33
Thermoluminescent Dosimeters
Glow curve (????)
34
Energy Dependence
Film
TLD
35
DOSE-MEASURING INSTRUMENTS
  • Electronic Dosimeters
  • employ solid-state semiconductors, silicon
    diodes, to detect beta and gamma radiation over a
    very wide range of dose rates and doses
  • measure and display instantaneous dose rate and
    integrate over time

36
NEUTRON MEASUREMENTS
  • Detection Reactions
  • Neutrons, like gamma rays, are not directly
    ionizing they must react with another medium to
    produce a primary ionizing particle
  • Because of the strong dependence of neutron
    reaction rate on the cross section for that
    particular reaction,
  • use different detection media, depending on the
    energy of the neutrons that we are trying to
    measure,
  • modify the neutron energy distribution so that it
    will be compatible with the detector

37
NEUTRON MEASUREMENTS
  • Detection Reactions
  • 10B(n,a)7L
  • either as BF3 gas or as a thin film on the inside
    surfaces of the detector tube
  • The ionization due to the alpha particle and the
    7Li recoil nucleus is counted
  • Elastic scattering of high-energy neutrons by
    hydrogen atoms. (scattered proton)
  • Nuclear fission fissile material (n,f) fission
    fragments
  • Neutron activation threshold detectors

38
NEUTRON MEASUREMENTS
  • Neutron Dosimetry
  • The dose equivalent (DE) from neutrons depends
    strongly on the energy of the neutrons, We
    therefore cannot simply convert neutron flux into
    dose equivalent unless we know the energy
    spectral distribution of the neutrons
  • Commercially available neutron dose-equivalent
    meters, utilize a thermal neutron detector
    surrounded by a spherical or semispherical
    moderator

39
NEUTRON MEASUREMENTS
  • Neutron Dosimetry
  • Commercially available neutron dose-equivalent
    meters

40
NEUTRON MEASUREMENTS
  • Neutron Dosimetry
  • Bubble Dosimeter
  • completely unresponsive to gamma radiation
  • allowing calibration and readout directly in
    microsieverts or in millirems of neutron dose
  • The number of bubbles is directly proportional to
    the neutron-equivalent dose.

41
  • ?????? (Mutual Recognition Arrangement, MRA)

42
  • ??????Traceability of Measurement

??????(BIPM) International Bureau of Weights
Measures
????????
???????????
?? NIM
?? NPL
?? PTB
?? NIST
?? ARPANSA
?? ETL
???? ???????? ??? NRSL
?????
?????
????
????
????
?????
43
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • Because of this fluctuating rate, it is not
    correct to speak of a true rate of transformation
    (which implies no statistical error in the
    measurement) but rather of a true average rate of
    transformation.
  • When we make a measurement, we estimate the true
    average rate from the observed count rate
  • The error of a determination is defined as the
    difference between the true average rate and the
    measured rate

44
APPLICATIONS OF STATISTICAL MODELS
45
Application B Estimation of the Precision of a
Single Measurement
46
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Binomial Distribution
  • n is the number of trials
  • for which each trial has a success probability p,
    then
  • the predicted probability of counting exactly x
    successes

47
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Binomial Distribution
  • Exp. dice throw
  • 3 ones in 3 consecutive throws. n3, p1/6, x3
  • P(3)3!/3!(1/6)31/216
  • 2 ones in 3 consecutive throws. n3, p1/6, x2
  • P(2)3!/(1!2!)(1/6)2(5/6)5/72
  • 1 ones in 3 consecutive throws. n3, p1/6, x1
  • P(1)3!/2!(1/6)(5/6)225/72

48
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The normal distributions
  • As n increases, the distribution curve becomes
    increasingly symmetrical around the center line
  • For the case where n is infinite, we have the
    familiar bell-shaped normal curve

49
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The normal distributions
  • 34 of the area lies between the mean and 1s
    above or below the mean.
  • about 14 of the area is between 1s and 2s
  • only about 2 of the total area lies beyond
    either or - 2s from the mean

50
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The normal distributions
  • Since the curve is symmetrical about the mean,
    68 of the area lies between ?1s
  • 96 of the area is included between ?2s

51
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • Many categories of binary processes can be
    characterized by a constant and small probability
    of success for each individual trial. Included
    are most nuclear counting experiments in which
    the number of nuclei in the sample is large and
    the observation time is short compared with the
    half-life of the radioactive species
  • Under these conditions, p ltlt 1, the binomial
    distribution approaches the Poisson distribution

52
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • standard deviation
  • coefficient of variation CV
  • Variance s 2

53
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • sum or difference

54
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • Exp. A) 10000 counts in 10-min, s 100 per 10
    min
  • 1000 ? 10 cpm, CV
    (10/1000)1001
  • Exp. B) 1000 counts in 1-min, s 32 per 1-min
  • 1000 ? 32 cpm, CV
    (32/1000)1003.2
  • When two quantities, each of which has its own
    variance

55
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • Example 9.6
  • A 5-min sample count gave 510 counts, while a 1-h
    background measurement yielded 2400 counts. What
    is the net sample counting rate and the standard
    deviation , of the net counting rate?

56
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • product or a quotient

57
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • Example 9.7

58
COUNTING STATISTICS
  • The Poisson distributions
  • Example 9.9

59
???? ( Counting statistic )
60
???? ( Counting statistic )
61
PROBLEMS
  • 9.1, 9.2, 9.4, 9.8, 9.18, 9.19, 9.20, 9.23, 9.24,
    9.27, 9.33
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