Title: Introduction to Health Physics Chapter 6 Radiation Dosimetry
1Introduction to Health PhysicsChapter
6Radiation Dosimetry
2UNITS
- During the early days of radiological experience,
there was no precise unit of radiation dose that
was suitable either for radiation protection or
for radiation therapy - Furthermore, since the fraction of the energy in
a radiation field that is absorbed by the body is
energy-dependent, it is necessary to distinguish
between radiation exposure and radiation absorbed
dose
3Absorbed Dose
- Gray
- Radiation damage depends on the absorption of
energy from the radiation and is approximately
proportional to the concentration of absorbed
energy in tissue - 1 Gy 1 J/kg
- Rad
- 1 rad 100 ergs/g
- 1 Gy 100 rads
4Exposure
- The exposure unit is a measure of the photon flux
and is related to the amount of energy
transferred from the X-ray field to a unit mass
of air. One exposure unit is defined as that
quantity of X- or gamma radiation that produces,
in air - 1 X unit 1 C/kg air
5The Roentgen
- The roentgen is an unit of exposure ( X ). The
ICRU defines X as the quotient of dQ by dm where
dQ is the absolute value of the total charge of
the ions of one sign produced in air when all the
electrons ( or - ) liberated by photons in air
of mass dm are completely stopped in air. - X dQ / dm
- The SI unit is C/kg but the special unit is
roentgen ( R ) - 1R 2.58 10-4 C/kg
6Measurement The Free Air Chamber
- Charged Particle Equilibrium (CPE ) Electron
produced outside the collection region, which
enter the ion-collecting region, is equal to the
electron produced inside the collection region ,
which deposit their energy outside the region.
7Radiation Absorbed Dose
- Exposure photon beam, in air, Elt3MeV
- Absorbed dose for all types of ionizing
radiation - Absorbed dose is a measure of the biologically
significant effects produced by ionizing
radiation - Absorbed dose dE/dm
- dE is the mean energy imparted by ionizing
radiation to material of dm - SI unit gray (Gy) 1Gy 1 J/kg
- ( 1 rad100ergs/g10-2J/kg, 1cGy1rad )
8Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
- Kerma ( K ) Kinetic energy released in the
medium. - K dEtr / dm
- dEtr is the sum of the initial kinetic energies
of all the charged particles liberated by
uncharged particles ( photons) in a material of
mass dm - The unit for kerma is the same as for dose, that
is, J/kg. The name of its SI unit is gray (Gy)
9Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
- Kerma ( K ) Kcol and Krad are the collision and
the radiation parts of kerma - K Kcol Krad
-
( J / m2 ) ( m2 / kg ) - the photon energy fluence, ?
- averaged mass energy absorption coefficient, men
/ r
10Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
- Exposure and Kerma
- Exposure is the ionization equivalent of the
collision kerma in air - (Kcol)air X ( w/e ) , X dQ/dm
- w/e 33.97 J/C
11Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
12Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
- Absorbed Dose and Kerma
- Suppose D1 is the dose at a point in some
material in a photon beam and another material is
substituted of a thickness of at least one
maximum electron range in all directions from the
point, then D2 , the dose in the second material,
is related to D1 by
D1
D2
13D1
D2
maximum electron range
maximum electron range
14Calculation of Absorbed Dose from Exposure
- Absorbed Dose to Air
- In the presence of charged particle equilibrium
(CPE), dose at a point in any medium is equal to
the collision part of kerma. - Dair ( Kcol )air X ( w/e )
- Dair(rad) 0.876 ( rad/R) X (R)
15Calculation of Absorbed Dose from Exposure
- Absorbed Dose to Any Medium
- Under CPE
- Dmed / Dair (men/r)med / (men/r )air A
- A ?med / ?air
- Dmed(rad) fmed X (R) A
- fmed roentgen-to-rad conversion factor
16Calculation of Absorbed Dose from Exposure
- Absorbed Dose to Any Medium
17Calculation of Absorbed Dose from Exposure
- Dose calculation with Ion Chamber In Air
- For low-energy radiations, chamber wall are thick
enough to provide CPE. - For high-energy radiation, Co-60, build-up cap
chamber wall to provide CPE.
18Relationship Between Kerma, Exposure, and
Absorbed Dose
- Example 6.4
- Consider a gamma-ray beam of quantum energy 0.3
MeV. If the photon flux is 1000 quanta/cm2/s, and
the air temperature is 20?, what is the exposure
rate at a point in this beam and what is the
absorbed dose rate for soft tissue at this point?
19The Bragg-Gray Cavity Theory
- Limitations when calculate absorbed dose from
exposure - Photon only
- In air only
- Photon energy lt3MeV
- The Bragg-Gray cavity theory, on the other hand,
may be used without such restrictions to
calculate dose directly from ion chamber
measurements in a medium
20The Bragg-Gray Cavity Theory
- Bragg-Gray theory
- The ionization produced in a gas-filled cavity
placed in a medium is related to the energy
absorbed in the surrounding medium. - When the cavity is sufficiently small, electron
fluence does not change. - Dmed / Dgas ( S / r )med / ( S / r )gas
- (S / r)med / (S / r)gas mass stopping power
ratio for the electron crossing the cavity
21The Bragg-Gray Cavity Theory
- Bragg-Gray theory
- Dmed / Dgas ( S / r )med / ( S / r )gas
- Jgas the ionization charge of one sign produced
per unit mass of the cavity gas
22The Bragg-Gray Cavity Theory
- The Spencer-Attix formulation of the Bragg-Gray
cavity theory - F(E) is the distribution of electron fluence in
energy - L/r is the restricted mass collision stopping
power with ? as the cutoff energy
23INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Corpuscular Radiation
- The calculation of the absorbed dose from
internally deposited radioisotopes - specific effective energy (SEE)
- The energy absorbed per unit mass per
transformation - For practical health physics purposes,
"infinitely large" may be approximated by a
tissue mass whose dimensions exceed the range of
the radiation from the distributed isotope. For
the case of alpha and most beta radiation, this
condition is easily met
24INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Example 6.11
- Calculate the daily dose rate to a testis that
weighs 18g and has 6660 Bq of 35S uniformly
distributed throughout the organ
25INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Effective Half-Life
- The total dose absorbed during any given time
interval after the deposition of the isotope in
the organ may be calculated by integrating the
dose rate over the required time interval - In situ radioactive decay of the isotope
- Biological elimination of the isotope
26INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Total Dose Dose Commitment
27INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Total Dose Dose Commitment
- For practical purposes, an "infinitely long time"
corresponds to about six effective half-lives
28INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Total Dose Dose Commitment
- Compartment theory
- In many cases, an organ or tissue behaves as if
the radioisotope were stored in more than one
compartment - Each compartment follows first order kinetics and
is emptied at its own clearance rate
29INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Total Dose Dose Commitment
- Compartment theory
- Since the activity in each compartment
contributes to the dose to that organ or tissue
30INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Gamma Emitters
- cannot simply calculate the absorbed dose by
assuming the organ to be infinitely large because
gammas, being penetrating radiations, may travel
great distances within tissue and leave the
tissue without interacting
31INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- C is the concentration of the isotope
- G is the specific gamma-ray emission
- m is the linear energy absorption coefficient
32INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
33INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Gamma Emitters
- geometry factor, g
34INTERNALLY DEPOSITED RADIOISOTOPES
- Gamma Emitters
- Average geometry factor, g
35- Gamma Emitters
- Example 6.12
- A spherical tank, capacity 1 m3 and radius 0.62
m, is filled with aqueous 137Cs waste containing
a total activity of 37,000 MBq (1Ci). What is the
dose rate at the tank surface if we neglect
absorption by the tank wall?
Surface0.5center
36- MIRD Method
- To account for the partial absorption of
gamma-ray energy in organs and tissues, the
Medical Internal Radiation Dose Committee of the
Society of Nuclear Medicine (MIRD) developed a
formal system for calculating the dose to a
"target" organ or tissue (T) from a "source"
organ (S) containing a uniformly distributed
radioisotope
37- MIRD Method
- based on the concept of absorbed fraction, that
is, the fraction of the energy radiated by the
source organ which is absorbed by the target
organ. S and T may be either the same organ or
two different organs bearing any of the possible
relationships to each other - These absorbed fractions are calculated by the
application of Monte Carlo methods to the
interactions and fate of photons or electrons
following their emission from the deposited
radionuclide
38 39- MIRD Method
- Monte Carlo methods
- events such as the interaction of photons with
matter are governed by probabilistic rather than
deterministic laws - individual simulated photons (or other
corpuscular radiation) are "followed" in a
computer from one interaction to the next - we know the energy of the emitted radiation, its
starting point, and its initial direction. The
probability of each possible type of interaction
within the organ and the energy transferred
during each interaction are also known
40- MIRD Method
- Monte Carlo methods
- A situation is simulated by starting with a very
large number of such nuclear transformations,
following the history of each particle as it
traverses the target tissue, and summing the
total amount of energy that the particles
dissipate within the target tissue
41- MIRD Method
- Monte Carlo methods
- absorbed fraction usually is less than 1
- For non-penetrating radiation, the absorbed
fraction usually is either 1 or 0, depending on
whether the source and target organs are the same
or different
42- MIRD Method
- Example 6.13
- calculations of the dose rate to a 0.6-kg sphere
made of tissue-equivalent material in which 1 MBq
of 131I is uniformly distributed - The total energy absorbed from the 131I is simply
the sum of the emitted beta-ray energy plus the
fraction of the emitted gamma-ray energy that is
absorbed by the sphere
43 44 45- MIRD Method
- Example 6.13, return to the MIRD method
- Let us consider two organs in the body
- The rate of energy emission by the radionuclide
in the source at any time that is carried by the
ith particle is given by
46- MIRD Method
- Example 6.13, return to the MIRD method
47- MIRD Method
- Furthermore, since the radioactivity is usually
widespread within the body, a target organ may be
irradiated by several different source organs.
The dose to the target, therefore is - where rk represents the target organ and rh
represents the source organ
48- NEUTRONS
- The absorbed dose from a beam of neutrons may be
computed by considering the energy absorbed by
each of the tissue elements that react with the
neutrons - For fast neutrons up to about 20 MeV, the main
mechanism of energy transfer is elastic collision - Thermal neutrons may be captured and initiate
nuclear reactions
49- NEUTRONS
- For fast neutrons
- For isotropic scattering, the average fraction of
the neutron energy transferred in an elastic
collision with a nucleus of atomic mass number M
is
50- NEUTRONS
- For thermal neutrons
- Exp. 14N( n, p )14C reaction
- Exp. 1H( n, g )2H reaction
51PROBLEMS
- 6.1, 6.2, 6.3, 6.4, 6.6, 6.10, 6.11,