The 1993 intercomparison of the measurement of in vivo radioactivity

被引:6
|
作者
Kramer, GH
Loesch, RM
Olsen, PC
机构
[1] Radiat Protec Bur, Human Monitoring Lab, Ottawa, ON K1A 1C1, Canada
[2] US DOE, Off Hlth, Dept Energy Lab Accreditat Program, Washington, DC 20585 USA
[3] Pacific NW Lab, Richland, WA 99352 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1093/oxfordjournals.rpd.a032943
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The Canadian National Calibration Reference Centre for In-Vivo, Monitoring and the United States Department of Energy collaborated to offer an international intercomparison programme to whole-body counting facilities in 1993. The Human Monitoring Laboratory fabricated a phantom shell corresponding to a reference four-year-old child and Battelle Pacific Northwest National Laboratory filled the shell with radioactive tissue substitute polyurethane to simulate a uniform natural radioactivity and fission product distribution in soft tissues (K-40,Y-88,Cs-137). Participants were not informed of the radioactive content and were asked to determine the identity and amount of the radionuclides in the energy range 200-2000 keV. Although all nuclides were identified correctly, most participants reported activities for Y-88 and Cs-137 only. Each facility was asked to make an estimate of the 'worst case' precision and estimate their minimum detectable activity. The programme had 35 participants from 18 countries for a total of 43 counting systems. The programme began in April 1993 and ended on 1 Aug. 1995. The intercomparison has shown that all whole-body counters are phantom-size dependent and that size-dependent calibration factors should be used. The scanning bed geometry is less size-dependent than the other geometries when only the standard (man-sized) calibration factors are used; however, when applied, size correction factors remove this geometrical advantage and all configurations perform equally well.
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页码:197 / 205
页数:9
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