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D OSE S AND S OURCES OF RAD I AT I ON EXPOSURE

D OSE S AND S OURCES OF RAD I AT I ON EXPOSURE. D OSE CONCEPTS, QUANT I T I ES AND UN I TS. Radiation exposure. Radiation exposure is a measure of the intensity of the radiation field.

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D OSE S AND S OURCES OF RAD I AT I ON EXPOSURE

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  1. DOSESAND SOURCESOF RADIATION EXPOSURE

  2. DOSE CONCEPTS, QUANTITIES AND UNITS

  3. Radiation exposure Radiation exposure is a measure of the intensity of the radiation field For X and gamma rays, exposure is precisely defined in terms of the amount of ionization produced in air by the radiation source

  4. Units of exposeddose The SI unit: coulombs per kilogram (C/kg) Traditional (old) unit: Roentgen (R) 1 R= 2.58x10-4 coulomb/kg

  5. Absorbed dose (D) Energy imparted to matter from any type of radiation D = E/m D -absorbed dose, E -energy absorbed bymaterial of mass ‘m’

  6. Units of absorbed dose The SI unit: joule/kilogram orgray (Gy) 1 Gy = 1 J/kg Traditional (old) unit: rad (radiationabsorbeddose) 1 Gy=100 rad

  7. Variants of radiation exposure External irradiation Internal irradiation Local irradiation Total irradiation Acute irradiation Chronic irradiation Prolonged irradiation Fractioned irradiation

  8. Equivalent dose (HT) Accounts for biological effect per unit dose radiation weighting absorbed factor ( WR)dose (D) HT= WRxD X

  9. Radiation weighting factors (WR)

  10. Unit of equivalent dose The SI unit:sievert (Sv) HT (Sv) = WR x D (Gy) Traditional (old) unit: rem(roentgen equivalent man) HT (rem) = WR x D (rad) 1 Sv = 100 rem

  11. Effective dose (E) Risk related parameter, takingrelative radiosensitivity ofeach organ and tissue intoaccount E = ΣT (WT x HT) WT - tissue weighting factor for organ T HT- equivalent dose received by organ or tissue T The SI unit of effective dose:sievert (Sv)

  12. Tissue weighting factors (WT)

  13. Collective effective dose (S) Total radiation dose incurred by population S = Σi(Ei x Ni) Ei - average effective dose in the population subgroup i Ni - number of individuals in subgroup i The SI unit of collective effective dose: man-sievert (man-Sv)

  14. Conversion between units used in radiation protection

  15. Sources and levels of radiation exposure to population

  16. Sources of radiation exposure to people population

  17. Background radiation • Terrestrial radioactivity • Cosmic radiation • Internal radioactivity

  18. Terrestrial radiation:external and internal exposure • U-238 Ra-222 • Th-232 Ra-220

  19. High background areas

  20. Cosmic radiation

  21. Internal radioactivity • Radioactivity • in diet • potassium-40 • lead-210 • polonium-210

  22. Background radiation Air Radon - 2 mSv Cosmic - 0.3 mSv Food - 0.4 mSv Terrestrial - 0.3 mSv

  23. Natural background radiation doses in Europe Naturally occuring background levels of radiation can typically range from2.0 to 4.0mSv a year

  24. Artificial sources of ionizing radiation • Radioactive sources • Electric generators of ionizing radiation • Activities using nuclear energy: • nuclear weapons • nuclear reactors

  25. Radioactive sources Radioactive sources are present in the sealed (normally non spreadable) and unsealed form (spreadable): • Gammagraphy essentially uses as sources iridium-192 and sometimes cobalt-60 • Neutrongraphy uses sources of neutrons like californium-252 or an americium/beryllium couple. • Betagraphy uses beta sources like carbon-14. • Chemical and biological radiation-treatmentuses gamma radiation sources cobalt-60 or caesium-137.

  26. Radioactive sources in medicine In medicine there are three uses for non-sealed radioactive nuclides: • Biological analyses: radio-markers have been replaced progressively by non-radioactive markers. • Medical imaging: nuclear medicine department use radio-pharmaceuticals for diagnostics, which are ingested by the patient to obtain an image of the tissue or organ while it is functioning. • Therapy: radio-pharmaceuticals can constitute the treatment itself, for example iodine 131 for the treatment of thyroid cancer.

  27. Electric generators of ionizing radiation The industrial applications of electric generators of ionizing radiation are neighbors of radioactive sources. Medical applications comprise radio-diagnostics and radiotherapy: • Medical radio-diagnostics is man’s largest source of exposure to ionizing radiation. It uses standard radiography equipment and X-scanners. • The electric generators used in radiotherapy are electron accelerators of medium energy (20 million volts) which enable a beam of electrons or X-rays to be obtained. In the research sector the large accelerators and scientific instruments are used to study the fine structure of matter.

  28. Effective doses from medical exposure

  29. Nuclear weapons Nuclear weapons can function by two very different modes – nuclear fission or nuclear fusion: • Fission arms employ the principle of an uncontrolled chain reaction, i.e. each fission reaction leads to several further fission reactions • Fusion arms (thermonuclear) use the fact that the union of deuterium and tritium to form a single nucleus of helium liberates a very large amount of energy

  30. Summary number of explosions of nuclear weapons from 1945 to 1998

  31. Summary number of nuclear explosions in atmosphere % USA Russia France China Britain

  32. Nuclear explosions in atmosphere in various years France

  33. Ecological consequences of nuclear explosions and radiation accident

  34. Effective doses received during various types of work ‘Non-coal’ mining 16.3 milisieverts Dose in milisieverts

  35. Comparison of radiation doses from any sources • 0.1 mSv: dental X-ray or return flight across Atlantic • 1 mSv: average yearly dose from natural radiation excluding radon  • 20 mSv: In many countries, the highest allowable yearly dose for people working with radioactivity • A few 100 mSv/year: lower limit for deterministic effects from prolonged exposure • 1000 to few 1000 mSv: thresholds for different deterministic effects at acute exposures • 10 000 mSv: will kill most people and higher animals after acute exposure

  36. Occupational exposure Public exposure 50 mSv maximum in any 1 year 100 mSv in 5 years 5 mSv in any 5 consecutive years Working figure 20 mSv per year Working figure 1 mSv per year Dose limits recomended by ICRP (1991)whole body

  37. Annual doses to tissues Occupational Public Lens of the eye 150 mSv 15 mSv Skin (1 cm2) 500 mSv 50 mSv Hands and feet or individual organ 500 mSv Dose limits recomended by ICRP (1991)tissues

  38. Modalities of irradiation and risk ofradiation exposure

  39. Risk due to radiation exposure

  40. External exposure The risks associated with external exposure depend on the type of incident radiation: • Alpha radiation does not present any risk by external exposure • Beta radiation can be hazard at the site of exposure on the skin and deep derma • Neutrons entail the same risks as gamma radiation • Gamma radiation reaches the skin, the derma and all deep tissues

  41. The San Salvador accident in February 1989 Three employees at an industrial sterilization plant in San Salvador were using a very significant Co-60 source of 600 TBq (more than 15,000 Ci). They were seriously irradiated due to obsolete plant and their not being aware of the risks. As a result of their position and the time they spent near the source, the whole body exposure doses they received have been estimated at 8 Gy, 4 Gy and 3 Gy, respectively. Vomiting appeared less than two hours after exposure. The three victims were referred to the nearest hospital because they felt very tired and could not stop vomiting. They did not present any other sign of acute exposure. Although they had mentioned their work in a plant using ionizing radiation, they were diagnosed as having food poisoning. Acute irradiation syndrome was only recognized three days later when another patient presented with erythema, skin burns, nausea and vomiting and told them that there had been a technical accident at an irradiation plant.

  42. External contamination The risks linked to external exposure of the skin differ according to the type of radiation: • alpha emitting radio-elements do nota priori present any risk by external contamination, • beta emitting radio-elements do present a special risk because they entail exposure which is almost exclusively of the skin, • gamma emitting radio-elements pose the same problems by external contamination as in external exposure, • external contamination by a neutron emitting radio-element is impossible. External contamination reveals a secondary potential risk of internal contamination by inhalation, ingestion or breaking and penetration of the skin.

  43. People involved in the Chernobyl accident in 1986 The Chernobyl accident, 26 April 1986, involved the very serious irradiation and contamination of a number of people working in the power station and those who immediately intervened, it provides a good example of external contamination. More than 200 patients were hospitalized in the hours following the catastrophe. Before this massive flood of victims, the initial efforts to manage the situation were limited to treatment of the symptoms a full assessment of lesions, treatment of traumatic lesions and summary external decontamination. The latter fact was revealed to be particularly damaging as all the patients had external contamination by fission products, such as Cs-137, Sr-90, or I-131, all of them being beta and some gamma emitters. Beta emitters on the skin caused severe radiological burns with complex development. It is estimated that 5 of the 28 premature deaths following the accident were attributable in part to radiological burns. These 5 deaths, and perhaps others, could doubtless have been avoided if good external decontamination of all the exposed subjects had been carried out in the shortest time.

  44. Internal contamination When radioactive nuclides enter an organism it is still called internal exposure. Incorporation can occur via different pathways: respiratory, digestive, transcutaneous or through breaking and penetration of the skin. The most frequent points of entry are by inhalation and wounds. In internal contamination the radio-elements are in contact with living cells. This position does not much alter the risk induced by beta or X radiation. By contrast, the risk associated with alpha radiation, which did not exist for the other modes of exposure, is major here. The presence of radio-elements in an organism is not always pathological, a certain number of atoms, of which the organism is constructed, are radio-elements (example: K-40).

  45. Paints for luminous watch faces In the 1920s and 1930s the clock making industry used radium 226 and 228 in radio-luminescent paint for watches. At this time, the risk from alpha emitting radio-elements was almost unknown. The workers who painted the luminous faces had the bad habit of tapering their brushes with their lips. Every time they did this they ingested several becquerels of radium. The fact that radium and calcium are chemical homologues, resulted in rare bone cancers appearing starting from the 20s, in the form of carcinoma of the sinus of the face. An epidemiological enquiry demonstrated the link between exposure to radium and the risk of bone cancer in 2,403 workers, whose ingestion of quantities of radium could be evaluated. 64 were suffering from osteosarcoma whereas 2 cases of this type of cancer would have been expected statistically.

  46. Common risks • Approximately 1 in 10,000 will die from • Working one year in a safe industry • Receiving 50 mSv whole body • Smoking 10 packs of cigarettes • Living with a smoker for 15 years • Drinking 50 bottles of wine • Taking a 1,000 mile bike ride • Traveling 30,000 miles by car • 10,000 hours flying time

  47. Summary of lecture • Becquerel (Bq), coulomb per kilogram (C/kg), gray (Gy) and sievert (Sv) are part of International System of Units (SI) • Absorbed dose of radiation in SI units is expressed in gray (Gy) • Ability of some types of radiation to cause more significant levels of biological damage taken into account with radiation weighting factor used to determine equivalent dose, expressed in sieverts (Sv) • Effective dose, expressed in sieverts (Sv), is based upon the estimates of the relative risk of stochastic effects from the irradiation of the different tissues • Natural sources of radiation is made 85 % of effective dosesreceived people from various sources of radiation

  48. Lecture is ended THANKS FOR ATTENTION In lecture materials of the International Atomic EnergyAgency (IAEA), kindly given by doctor Elena Buglova, were used

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