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Neutrons in radiation protection neutron shielding neutron dosimetry

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Neutrons in radiation protection neutron shielding neutron dosimetry Prof. Fran ois Tondeur, DrSc ISIB, Brussels, Belgium Neutrons sources Reactors : chain reaction ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Neutrons in radiation protection neutron shielding neutron dosimetry


1
Neutrons in radiation protectionneutron
shieldingneutron dosimetry
  • Prof. François Tondeur, DrSc
  • ISIB, Brussels, Belgium

2
Neutrons sources
  • Reactors chain reaction of fission ? fast n
  • thermal reactors thermal neutrons (1.5 kT)
  • Accelerators various reactions
  • e ? X and (X,n)
  • (p,n), (p,xn) , .
  • unwanted or applied (neutron therapy,)
  • Generally fast neutrons
  • Neutron generators, isotopic sources Am-Be, 252Cf
    for various applications fast neutrons
  • Most n sources also produce g rays

3
Neutron shields basic principle
  • Fast neutrons interact mostly by scattering
  • maximum energy loss with 1H(n,n)1H
  • Slow neutrons are easily captured by
  • 10B(n,a)7Li 6Li(n,a)3H
  • 113Cd(n,g)114Cd ..
  • (n,a) preferred (g need extra Pb shield)
  • Two steps
  • Slow-down of fast n by H-rich medium
  • Capture of slow n by B

4
Practice basics
  • Water (d1/10?20-40 cm according to e) boric
    acid
  • Easy to prepare
  • Storage of source with easy handling
  • Risk of leakage and loss
  • Paraffin borate
  • Easy to prepare
  • Risk of fire/melting
  • Concrete boron compound
  • Increased thickness (x2), more weight
  • Permanent even if fire

5
Direct absorption
  • Fast n shielding can also be based on direct
    absorption without moderation by (n,a) reactions,
    e.g. in steel
  • Thickness a bit smaller than paraffin, much
    higher weight

6
Neutron dosimetry
7
Effective dose
  • Effective dose E S wt.wr.Dtr Sv
  • regulated (workers lt20 mSv/y, public lt1 mSv/y)
  • sum over irradiated tissues t
  • sum over radiation types r (e, g, p, n, a,
    .)
  • D absorbed dose GyJ/kg
  • physical quantity
  • can be measured directly (ion chambers, )
  • can be calculated from fluence F D C(e).F
  • F fluence (particles/m2) eparticle energy

8
Equivalent dose
  • Htr wr.Dtr Sv
  • Gammas and electrons wr1
  • Neutrons wr(en)
  • lt10 keV 5
  • 10-100 keV 10
  • 100-2000 keV 20
  • 2-20 MeV 10
  • gt20 MeV 5
  • ? need of spectrometric information

9
ICRU dose
  • H and HP defined for measurement of the dose
    from penetrating radiation
  • Defined for the normalization of devices
  • Under specified test conditions, the devices must
    reproduce H Q.D calculated at 1 cm depth in
    the body
  • Q(LET) depends on LET de/dx of (secondary)
    charged particles (eparticle energy)
  • ? information on LET needed
  • LET(e)

10
Neutron-gamma discrimination
  • n and g are both penetrating
  • They are both indirectly ionising
  • Evaluate LET of charged particles individual
    events
  • g ? e low LET de/dx
  • n ? p or nuclei , high LET
  • Select specific reaction for n appropriate
    medium

11
Thermal neutrons
  • ? From dose measurements Hn 5 Dn .
  • n/g difference of 2 detectors
  • Thermoluminescence 7LiF (g only) , 6LiF (n
    g)
  • irradiated LiF emits light when heated
  • number of photons proportional to D
  • ? From fluence / flux measurement
  • BF3 , 3He counters
  • n/g by pulse height (e range ltlt counter ? low
    energy deposited ? small pulses)

12
Fast neutrons
  • Fast neutrons interact in tissues mostly by
    elastic scattering on protons (80 of the dose)
  • Tissue equivalent device high proportion of H.
  • organic material, methane, hydrogen.
  • n/g
  • 2 detectors with and without H (e.g. CH4 / CO2)
  • By pulse height in gas proportional counter
  • By pulse shape in some organic
  • scintillators
  • e short pulse , p long pulse

13
Tissue equivalent proportional counter
  • Developed for cosmic rays
  • Appropriate for high energies
  • No discrimination
  • Range gt detector even
  • for secondary nuclei
  • LET ? e / d ,
  • d average track length
  • in the detector

14
Spectral measurement
  • If the spectral response of the detector is
    known, usually by Monte Carlo simulation, and n/g
    discrimination possible, the pulse height
    spectrum can be unfolded
  • R(En,Ed) pulse height (Ed) spectrum for
    neutrons of energy En to be calculated
  • M(Ed) measured pulse height spectrum
  • S(En) unfolded neutron fluence energy spectrum
    dF/de
  • M(Ed)S R(En,Ed).S(En) or (M)(R).(S)
  • (S) (R)-1.(M) deconvolution

15
unfolding
  • Measured spectrum and
  • reconstructed one ?
  • Matrix product not accurate
  • due to the statistical errors
  • present in the measured spectrum
  • Search of best fit between the
  • reconstructed spectrum
  • (M)(R).(S) and the measured one , when varying
    (S)
  • - unfolded spectrum ?

16
Monitors with moderator
  • Except for H-rich detectors, excessive
    sensitivity to slow neutrons (high s), nearly no
    sensitivity for fast neutrons
  • ? moderator shield (e.g. PE) around detector
  • partial absorption of slow neutrons (efficiency
    ?)
  • slow-down of fast neutrons (efficiency ?)
  • thickness adjusted ? same ratio H/N (Ncounts)
    for slow and fast
  • but H/N too big for
  • intermediate neutrons
  • (H overestimated)
  • Rem-meter

17
Albedo dosimetry
  • Principle use the human body as a moderator
  • 2 6LiF detectors ( 2 7LiF for g)
  • One shielded by Cd for slow neutrons from the
    body
  • only sensitive to the slow neutrons of the field
  • One shielded for slow neutrons of the field
  • only sensitive to slow neutrons from the body
  • fast neutrons from the field that are slowed
    down by the body
  • ? calibration for slow and fast neutrons
  • Not calibrated at intermediate energies

18
Multi-sphere dosimetry
  • Bonner spheres
  • K moderator spheres i of increasing radius Ri
    around the detector
  • K measurements of Ni counts allow to determine
    SkDF/De for K energy groups by deconvolution, if
    the response matrix is calculated
  • Ni Sk R(i,k)Sk (N)(R).(S)
  • ? (S)(R)-1.(N)
  • Usually
  • K10 or 12

19
Bubble dosimeters
  • Replace now albedo for personal dosimetry
  • Superheated drops in a gel (at room T) are kept
    liquid by pressurisation . Pressure is released
    for the measurement
  • Drops form bubbles when enough energy is
    deposited in them .
  • This is the case for recoil protons (n), not for
    electrons (g)
  • The design allows
  • to approximately
  • obtain Nbubbles?H
  • Version for slow n with
  • sensitive element (Li,B ?)
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