+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Date post: 09-Feb-2022
Category:
Upload: others
View: 23 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
31
Dosimetry for Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for radiation processing Malcolm McEwen Malcolm McEwen Ionizing Radiation Standards Institute for National Measurement Standards N i lR hC il C d Ionizing Radiation Standards Institute for National Measurement Standards N i lR hC il C d NationalResearchCouncil Canada NationalResearchCouncil Canada SIM workshop, 10 SIM workshop, 10 th th November 2011 November 2011
Transcript
Page 1: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Dosimetry forDosimetry forDosimetry for radiation processingDosimetry for radiation processing

Malcolm McEwenMalcolm McEwen

Ionizing Radiation StandardsInstitute for National Measurement StandardsN i l R h C il C d

Ionizing Radiation StandardsInstitute for National Measurement StandardsN i l R h C il C dNational Research Council Canada

Workshop, 16 June 2010, Ottawa

National Research Council Canada

Workshop, 16 June 2010, OttawaSIM workshop, 10SIM workshop, 10thth November 2011November 2011

Page 2: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Outline

1. What is radiation processing?

2. Radiation Sources

3. Dosimetry requirements

4. Examples of dosimetry systems4. Examples of dosimetry systems

Page 3: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

1. What is radiation processing?

“The use of radiation to modify the characteristics of a material or artefact.”

This includes:

Food irradiation

Sterilization of medical goodsSterilization of medical goods

Materials modification

Page 4: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

A. Food irradiation

Purpose Applications

Inactivation of harmful organisms in food ingredients Various spices and herbs. Onion powder. Mineral supplements

Inactivation of salmonella food poisoning organism Meat including poultry. Egg products. Prawn and shrimps. Meat and fish meal.

Extension of refrigerated shelf life Meat and fish

Prevention of spoilage Control of mouldControl of insect infestation

Strawberries, cocoa beans, mangoes, papayas

Minimizing deterioration

Control of parasites and insects to meet quarantine requirements Parasites in meat and insects in exotic fruits and beans

Inhibition of sprouting in crops during storage Potatoes, onions and garlicInhibition of sprouting in crops during storage Potatoes, onions and garlic

Typical dose for food irradiation is 1-10 kGy

Page 5: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

A. Food irradiation

Low dose applications (up to 1 kGy) DoseSprout inhibition in bulbs and tubers  0.1 kGyDelay in fruit ripening  0.5 kGyInsect disinfestation including quarantine treatment and elimination of food  1.0 kGyg qborne parasites 

y

Medium dose applications (1 kGy to 10 kGy)Reduction of spoilage microbes to prolong shelf‐life of meat, poultry and seafoods under refrigeration 

2 kGyg

Reduction of pathogenic microbes in fresh and frozen meat, poultry and seafoods 

5 kGy

Reducing the number of microorganisms in spices to improve hygienic quality  10 kGyHigh dose applications (above 10 kGy)g pp ( y)Sterilization of packaged meat, poultry, and their products that are shelf stable without refrigeration 

50 kGy

Sterilization of Hospital diets 50 kGy

US figures (per year):80,000 tons of spices14,000 tons tropical fruit7 000 t d b f/ lt7,000 tons ground beef/poultry

Page 6: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

B. Sterilization of medical goods

How do you sterilize single-use medical goods such asuse medical goods such as plastic syringes, valves, absorbent pads, bandages, t ?etc?

Autoclave

Sterilizing gas (ethylene oxide)

Ionizing radiation

Typical dose for sterilization is 15-25 kGy(Definition of sterile: < 1 viable organism in 106 product units)

Page 7: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

C. Materials modification

Wide range of materials are modified using ionizing radiation:

Insulation for telecom cable

Heat-shrink tubing

Car tyres

Composite materials –radiation (“cold”) curingradiation (“cold”) curing

Floppy disks (anyone remember these?)

Gem stones

Typical dose for materials modification is 100 kGy

Page 8: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

2. Radiation sources for processing 

Co-60 (1.25 MeV)

MeV electron beams (2 – 10 MeV)

MV photon beams (~ 6 MV)

keV electron beams (80 – 120 keV)

keV photon beams (<250 kVp) under development

The radiation processing industry is presently focussed on Co 60 and high energy electron beamsfocussed on Co-60 and high energy electron beams

Page 9: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Co‐60 

Page 10: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Co‐60 

Source activity can be up to a few megacuries

Canada a major supplier (side-effect of CANDU reactors)

2 id d i di ti i d

120

2-sided irradiation required

60

80

100

ose

20

40

60%

do

00 5 10 15 20 25

d (cm)

Page 11: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

MeV electron beams

Usually 5 or 10 MeV systems- Beam powers from 10 kW to

100 kW- Energy limited by activation

thresholds

60

80

100

se

20

40

60

% d

os

00 1 2 3 4 5 6

d (cm)

2 sided irradiation also required2-sided irradiation also required

Page 12: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

keV electron beams 

50

40

50

5E-014

6E-014Step dose profileAEB, 6 mA, 50 fpm

80 keV (B3 film)90 keV (B3 film)100 keV (B3 film)

Monte Carlo calculationsnormalized to this measurement.

30

e, k

Gy 4E-014

5E-014

Gy

cm2

81.3 keV (Monte Carlo)91.4 keV (Monte Carlo)101.5 keV (Monte Carlo)

Excellent for surface

20

Mea

sure

d do

se

3E-014

ose

per f

luen

ce, GExcellent for surface

treatments (e.g. sterilizing surfaces and curing of inks on

k i )

10

M

1E 014

2E-014

Dopackaging)

0 0

1E-014

0 20 40 60 80

Thichness of mylar, µm

Page 13: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Bremsstahlung sources

• MV photons beams– Penetration greater than for cobalt-60 gamma rays– Scattering and shadowing less important than for electronsg g p– Inefficient due to bremsstrahlung process – IBA Rhodotron

700 kW electron beam accelerator is currently only device operating

Page 14: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

3. Requirements for Dosimetry in Radiation Processing

Q. Do we need dosimetry for industrial processes?

A. Product evaluation may be sufficient

Page 15: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

3. Requirements for Dosimetry in Radiation Processing

Standards such as EN/ISO 11137 (medical device sterilization) contain detailed requirements related to dosimetry e.g.

“4.3.4 Dosimetry used in the development, validation and routine control of the sterilizationvalidation and routine control of the sterilization process shall have measurement traceability to national or International Standards and shall h k l l f i ”have a known level of uncertainty.”

Page 16: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Traceability Chain

Standards Laboratory - National StandardsCalorimeters, Ionization chambers

G ( %)Dw Gy (1%)Dw kGy (2%)

||Reference Standard Dosimetry Systems (3%)

Fricke, Ceric, DichromateAlanine, Calorimeters

|Routine Dosimetry Systems (5%)

Radiochromic films,Plastics Dyed plasticsPlastics, Dyed plastics

Page 17: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Primary standards

Calorimetry is the default primary standard for radiation processing

Generally the primary standard for radiation processing is a radiotherapy level device.

Calorimeters have been developed to pass through irradiation plants

10 MeV electron beam calorimeter

Therapy-level graphite calorimeter

80-120 keV electron beam calorimeter

Page 18: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

In situ challenges

Complex product path limits options for on-line measurements

High radiation doses affect sensitive electronics (e.g., wireless)High radiation doses affect sensitive electronics (e.g., wireless)

Page 19: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

4. Selection of a dosimetry system

First consideration:• Which measurements do you

Second, take account of:• Dose rangeWhich measurements do you

want to carry out?

• Routine dosimetry

Dose range

• Radiation type

• Influence quantities• Dose mapping

dosimetry

• Gamma

q

• Stability of dosimeter response

• Gamma

• Electron• Required level of uncertainty

• Required spatial resolution

There is no “ideal” dosimeter

Page 20: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Example 1 ‐ Alanine dosimeter

Page 21: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Alanine dosimeter

Summary• Measurement of free radical concentrationMeasurement of free radical concentration• Pellets or films• Dose range: 10 Gy – 100 kGy

Stable signal for more than one year• Stable signal for more than one year• Reproducibility better than 0.5%, 1.s.d• Measurement instrument - EPR

spectrometer

Page 22: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Alanine dosimeter ‐ readout

Concentration of free radicals measured by EPR (= ESR)

Derivative of absorption spectrum used for analysisDerivative of absorption spectrum used for analysis

Peak-to-peak height is robust parameter except at very low doses (<50 Gy)

Page 23: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Alanine dosimeter ‐ readout

Page 24: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Example 2 - Dichromate dosimeter

Dichromate solution in ampoules for measurement atmeasurement at gamma facilities

Use: Reference dosimetry

Page 25: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Dichromate dosimeter

• Measurement of colour change• Liquid in glass ampoules• Liquid in glass ampoules• Dose range: 10 kGy –50 kGy• Stable signal for more than one yearg y• Reproducibility less than 0.5%, 1.s.d• Measurement instrument - Spectrophotometer

Page 26: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Example 3 ‐ Film dosimeters

Response - Change of colour

Risø B3 film

Thickness 20 µm FWT filmThickness 10, 50 µm

Measured at 554 nmThickness 10, 50 µmMeasured at605 nm and 510 nm

Page 27: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Film dosimeters

RResponsefunctions forFWTand Risø B3and Risø B3

Use:Dose mappingDose mappingRoutine dosimetry

Page 28: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Example 4 ‐ PMMA dosimeters

Range of dyed and un-dyed PMMA dosimeters.

Optical absorbance measurement - strips designed to fit into standard spectrophotometers.

Packaged to prevent changes in water content.g

Page 29: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

PMMA dosimeters – dose response

R d 4034HPDose range 100 Gy to 150

6

7

8

per c

m

Red 4034HP

Amber 3042R,603nmAmber 3042R,

Dose range 100 Gy to 150 kGy depending on dosimeter type and measurement wavelength.

3

4

5

c ab

sorb

ance

, p 651nmGammachrome YR® 64

g

Use: Gamma dose mapping and routine dosimetry.

0

1

2

Dose kGy

Spec

ific

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50

Page 30: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Summary

Radiation processing is a growing industry Radiation processing is a growing industry Uncertainty requirements for dosimetry may not as

strict as for radiotherapy BUT unique challenges related to in-situ

measurement, high doses, inhomogeneous products etcproducts, etc

Few national dosimetry laboratories involved in this field worldwide

30

Page 31: Dosimetry for Dosimetry for radiation processing Dosimetry for

Acknowledgements

Peter Sharpe (NPL, UK)Mark Bailey (NPL, UK)

h kh kThank YouThank You

31


Recommended