PowerPoint Presentation
PowerPoint Presentation
PowerPoint Presentation
Chapter 7
• Description of radiation beam
Measurement of Radiation:
• Calculation of the absorbed dose
Dosimetry – Bragg-Grey cavity theory
– Practical ion chambers
Radiation Dosimetry I
– Determination of absorbed dose for energies
above 3 MeV
Text: H.E Johns and J.R. Cunningham, The – Dosimetry of radio-nuclides
physics of radiology, 4th ed.
http://www.utoledo.edu/med/depts/radther
1
Electronic equilibrium Example 1
No photon • In reality dose deposition
attenuation
at any point is the result of • Calculate the kerma given the photon flux
kerma upstream 1016/m2, photon energy 10 MeV, linear
• In case of electronic attenuation coefficient 0.028 cm2/g and
equilibrium:
energy transfer attenuation coefficient 0.022
cm2/g. /
D Eab K (1 g ) K / Etr / tr E
/
• g- fraction of energy lost to A. 5 J/kg 1 10 4 m 2
K 1016 0.022 3 10MeV
bremsstrahlung B. 15 J/kg m2 10 kg
• Typically approximate C. 25 J/kg 2.2 1014 MeV / kg
electronic equilibrium is 2.2 1014 1.6 1013 J / kg 35J / kg
D. 35 J/kg
assumed
• The cavity is always assumed so small that it does not affect Dmed Dwall ab
the beam spectrum wall
2
Determination of absorbed dose Correction factor
• Both the air cavity and wall introduce perturbations to the beam
• In order to account for the finite size of both the air cavity and
wall, need to introduce attenuation correction factor kc
• Values of kc are determined approximately
med
Q wall ab
Dmed W S air k c
m wall
3
Example 3 Practical ion chambers
• Air kerma is 5 mGy. What is the
exposure?
Q Q
K W; X
m m
A. 0.3 R
X K / W 5 103
J J
/ 33.4
• Assume that even for a volume of air small compared to the
B. 0.6 R kg C range of electrons the ionization is produced by electrons
C. 0.9 R C within the volume
0.15 103 0.15 103 3.9 103 R 0.58R
kg • Adding air-equivalent wall and two electrodes – obtain a
D. 1.2 R practical device for measurement of exposure
• It has to be calibrated against the standard chamber to
produce energy dependent calibration factor Nx: get X=MNx
4
Exposure rate from g-emitters Exposure rate from g-emitters
• The exposure rate constant is the exposure rate in
R/hr at a point 1 meter away from a source having • Exposure rate
activity of 1 Ci constant in air for a
• From the inverse square law the exposure rate at source emitting 1
any point distance d away from a source with photon of energy hv
activity A:
X A
per disintegration:
2
t d 194.5hvab / air Rm 2 hr 1Ci 1
R m2
• Units of
hr Ci
Example 4 Example 5
• Four 30 mCi 1-125 seeds are arranged at the • The exposure rate constant for a radionuclide is
corners of a 1 cm square. Neglecting tissue 12.9 R cm2/(mCi h). How many half-value layers
attenuation, the exposure rate in tissue at the (HVLs) of shielding are required to reduce the
center of the square is: (Exposure rate constant = exposure rate from a 19.5 mCi source at 2 m to
1.46 Rcm2/mCi-hr) less than 1 mR/h?
A. 1
A. 3 15 R/hr X A 12.9 19.5
B. 376 R/h X 4 A 4 1.46 30
B. 2 2
C. 3 t d 2002
C. 264 R/hr t d2 ( 2 0.52 ) 2 D. 4 0.00629 R/h 6.3 mR/h
D. 192 R/hr
350.4 R/hr E. 6 6.3 ln 6.3
E. 350 R/hr 1 n 2.65 n 3
2n ln 2