Title: Neutron Interactions and Dosimetry I
1Neutron Interactions and Dosimetry I
- Kinetic Energy
- Interactions
- Quality Factor
- n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
2Introduction
- This section is intended to provide an
introduction to neutron dosimetry that is
relevant to the human body, from the viewpoint of
either radiation hazard or neutron-beam
radiotherapy - We will be primarily concerned about neutron
interactions with the majority tissue elements H,
O, C, and N, and the resulting absorbed dose
3Introduction
- Because of the short ranges of the secondary
charged particles that are produced in such
interactions, CPE is usually well approximated - Since no bremsstrahlung x-rays are generated, the
absorbed dose can be assumed to be equal to the
kerma at any point in neutron fields at least up
to an energy E ? 20 MeV
4Neutron Kinetic Energy
- For dosimetry purposes it is convenient to divide
neutron fields into three energy categories - Thermal Neutrons
- Intermediate-Energy Neutrons
- Fast Neutrons
5Thermal Neutrons
- Thermal neutrons have only the Maxwellian
distribution of thermal motion that is
characteristic of the temperature of the medium
in which they exist - Their most probable energy at 20C is E 0.025
eV - All neutrons with energies below 0.5 eV are
usually referred to as thermal because of a
simple test that can be applied to a neutron
field to measure how completely it has been
thermalized by passage through a moderator
6Cadmium Ratio
- A Cd filter 1 mm thick absorbs practically all
incident neutrons below about 0.5 eV, but readily
passes those above that energy - A thermal-neutron detecting foil such as gold can
be radioactivated by neutrons through the
197Au(n,?)198Au interaction - Exposing two such foils in the neutron field, one
foil bare and the other enclosed in 1 mm of Cd,
provides two activation readings - The ratio of the bare to the Cd reading is called
the cadmium ratio it is unity if no thermal
neutrons are present, and rises towards infinity
as the thermal-neutron component approaches 100
7Intermediate-Energy Neutrons
- Neutrons with energies above the thermal cutoff
of 0.5 eV but below 10 keV are called
intermediate-energy neutrons - Above 10 keV, the dose in the human body is
dominated by the contribution of recoil protons
resulting from elastic scattering of hydrogen
nuclei - Below that energy the dose is mainly due to
?-rays resulting from thermal-neutron capture in
hydrogen
8Fast Neutrons
- These neutrons cover the energy range from 10 keV
upward
9Tissue Composition
- The following table gives the atomic composition,
in percentage by weight, of human muscle tissue
and the whole body - The ICRU composition for muscle has been assumed
in most cases for neutron-dose calculations,
lumping the 1.1 of other minor elements
together with oxygen to make a simple
four-element (H, O, C, N) composition
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11Kerma Calculations
- For a single neutron energy, type of target atom,
and kind of interaction, the kerma that results
from a neutron fluence ? (cm-2) at a point in a
medium is given by - where ? is the interaction cross section in
cm2/(target atom), Nt is the number of target
atoms in the irradiated sample, m is the sample
mass in grams, and Etr is the total kinetic
energy (MeV) given to charged particles per
interaction
12Kerma Calculations
- K is thus given in rad (or centigrays), and its
value is equal to the absorbed dose D at the same
point under the usual CPE conditions - The product of (1.602 ? 10-8?Ntm-1Etr) is equal
to the kerma factor Fn in rad cm2/n - Thus the equation reduces to
13Kerma Calculations
- Fn is not generally a smooth function of Z and E,
unlike the case of photon interaction
coefficients - Interpolation vs. Z cannot be employed to obtain
values of Fn for elements for which data are not
listed, and interpolation vs. E is feasible only
within energy regions where resonance peaks are
absent
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15Kerma Calculations
- For a continuous neutron spectrum with a
differential fluence distribution ??(E) (n/cm2
MeV), the kerma contribution by j-type
interactions with i-type target atoms is - where Etr(E)ij is the total kinetic energy
given to charged particles per type-j interaction
with type-i atoms by neutrons of energy E
16Kerma Calculations
- For the same units as in the first equation, Kij
is given in rads or centigrays - It can be summed over all i and j to obtain the
kerma (or dose) due to all types of interactions
and target atoms
17Thermal-Neutron Interactions in Tissue
- There are two important interactions of thermal
neutrons with tissue neutron capture by
nitrogen, 14N(n,p)14C, and neutron capture by
hydrogen, 1H(n,?)2H - The nitrogen interaction releases a kinetic
energy of Etr 0.62 MeV that is shared by the
proton (0.58 MeV) and the recoiling nucleus (0.04
MeV)
18Thermal-Neutron Interactions in Tissue
- Thermal neutrons have a larger probability of
capture by hydrogen atoms in muscle, because
there are 41 times more H atoms than N atoms in
tissue - The energy given to ?-rays per unit mass and per
unit fluence of thermal neutrons can be obtained
from an equation similar to Eq. (1), but
replacing Etr by E? 2.2 MeV (the ?-ray energy
released in each neutron capture)
19Thermal-Neutron Interactions in Tissue
- This of course does not contribute directly to
the kerma, since the ?-rays must interact and
transfer energy to charged particles to produce
kerma - If the irradiated tissue mass is small enough to
allow the ?-rays to escape, the kerma due to
thermal neutrons is only that resulting from the
nitrogen (n, p) interactions - In larger masses of tissue the ?-rays are
increasingly absorbed before escaping, thus
contributing to the kerma
20Thermal-Neutron Interactions in Tissue
- In the center of a 1-cm diameter sphere of tissue
the kerma contributions from the (n, p) and (n,
?) processes are comparable in size - In a large tissue mass (radius gt 5 times the
?-ray MFP) where radiation equilibrium is
approximated, the kerma due indirectly to the (n,
?) process is 26 times that of the nitrogen (n,
p) interaction - The human body is intermediate in size, but large
enough so the 1H(n, ?)2H process dominates in
kerma (and dose) production
21Interaction by Intermediate and Fast Neutrons
- The following diagram summarizes the processes
that contribute directly to kerma in a small mass
of tissue in free space - The dashed curve a is the sum of all the others
- It is dominated below 10-4 MeV by curve g, which
represents (n,p) reactions, mostly in nitrogen - Above 10-4 MeV elastic scattering of hydrogen
nuclei (curve b) contributes nearly all of the
kerma
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23Interaction by Intermediate and Fast Neutrons
- The average energy transferred by elastic
scattering to a nucleus is closely approximated
(i.e., assuming isotropic scattering in the
center-of-mass system) by - where E neutron energy,
- Ma mass of target nucleus,
- Mn neutron mass
24Interaction by Intermediate and Fast Neutrons
- For hydrogen recoils?Etr ? E/2 with Etr-values
ranging from 0 (for protons recoiling at 90) to
Etr E for protons recoiling straight ahead - For other tissue atoms, elastic scattering
gives?Etr 0.142E for C atoms, 0.124E for N
atoms, and 0.083E for O atoms
25Neutron Sources
- The most widely available neutron sources are
nuclear fission reactors, accelerators, and
radioactive sources - Fissionlike spectra have average neutron energies
around 2 MeV, and are available from nuclear
reactors, 252Cf radioactive (spontaneous fission)
sources, critical assemblies, and other mock
fission sources such as that produced by 12-MeV
cyclotron-accelerated protons on a thick Be target
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27Neutron Sources
- Several types of Be(?,n) radioactive sources are
in common use, employing 210Po, 239Pu, 241Am, or
226Ra as the emitter - Neutron yields are on the order of 1 neutron per
104 ?-particles - The following diagram exemplifies the neutron
spectra emitted, which have average energies ? 4
MeV
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29Neutron Sources
- Low-energy neutron generators accelerate
deuterium to 0.1 0.4 MeV and impinge them on
targets containing either deuterium or tritium - The output neutrons are in the range of 1.9 3.4
MeV for the D(d,n)3He reaction, and 12.9 15.6
MeV for T(d,n)4He - Outputs on the order of 1011 and 1013 n/s,
respectively, can be achieved in this way
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32Neutron Sources
- Cyclotrons can be used to produce neutron beams
by accelerating protons or deuterons into various
targets, most commonly Be - The following diagram shows the typical
bell-shaped neutron spectra that result from
deuteron bombardment - The neutron energies extend from zero to somewhat
above the deuteron energy, and have an average of
about 0.4 times that energy
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34Neutron Quality Factor
- For purposes of neutron radiation protection the
dose equivalent H is equal to DQ, where Q is the
quality factor, which depends on neutron energy
according to the following curve - The quality factor for all ?-rays is taken to be
unity for purposes of combining neutron and ?-ray
dose equivalents
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36n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
- Neutrons and ?-rays are both indirectly ionizing
radiations that are attenuated more or less
exponentially in passing through matter - Each is capable of generating secondary fields of
the other radiation, by (n, ?) and (?, n)
reactions, respectively
37n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
- (?, n) reactions are only significant for
high-energy ?-rays (?10 MeV), but (n, ?)
reactions can proceed at all neutron energies and
are especially important in the case of
thermal-neutron capture, as discussed for 1H(n,
?)2H - As a result neutron fields are normally found to
be contaminated by secondary ?-rays - Since neutrons generally have more biological
effectiveness per unit of absorbed dose than
?-rays, it is usually desirable to perform
dosimetry in a way that provides separate dose
accounting for ? and n components
38n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
- It will be convenient to discuss three general
categories of dosimeters for n ? applications - Neutron dosimeters that are relatively
insensitive to ? rays - ?-ray dosimeters that are relatively insensitive
to neutrons - Dosimeters that are comparably sensitive to both
radiations
39n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
- It is especially important in the case of neutron
dosimeters to specify the reference material to
which the dose reading is supposed to refer - Usually, because of the universal interest in
radiation effects on the human body, kerma or
absorbed dose in muscle tissue provides the
reference basis for specifying dosimeter
performance
40n ? Mixed-Field Dosimetry
- It should be noted that water is not as close a
substitute for muscle tissue for neutrons as it
is for photons - Water is 1/9 hydrogen by weight muscle is 1/10
hydrogen - Water contains no nitrogen, and hence can have no
14N(n,p)14C reactions by thermal neutrons
41Equation for n ? Dosimeter Response
- The general equation for the response of a
dosimeter to a mixed field of neutrons and ?-rays
can be most simply written in the form - or alternatively as
42Equation for n ? Dosimeter Response
- where Qn,? total response due to the combined
- effects of the ?-rays and
neutrons, - A response per unit of absorbed
dose in - tissue for ?-rays,
- B response per unit of absorbed
dose in - tissue for neutrons,
- D? ?-ray absorbed dose in tissue,
and - Dn neutron absorbed dose in tissue
43Equation for n ? Dosimeter Response
- By convention the absorbed dose referred to in
these terms is assumed to be that under CPE
conditions in a small imaginary sphere of muscle
tissue, centered at the dosimeter midpoint with
the dosimeter absent - Most commonly this tissue sphere is taken to be
just large enough (0.52-g/cm2 radius) to produce
CPE at its center in a 60Co beam