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Fifth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study

Fifth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study
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Release: 1980
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The fifth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study (PDIS) was conducted at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory's (ORNL) Dosimetry Applications Research (DOSAR) facility on March 20-22, 1979. This study is the latest PDIS in the continuing series started at the DOSAR facility in 1974. The PDIS is a three day study, typically in March, where personnel dosimeters are mailed to the DOSAR facility, exposed to a range of low-level neutron radiation doses (1 to 15 mSv or equivalently, 100 to 1500 mrem) and neutron-to-gamma ratios (1:1-10:1) using the Health Physics Research Reactor (HPRR) as the radiation source, and returned to the participants for evaluation. This report is a summary and analysis of the results reported by the various participants. The participants are able to intercompare their results with those of others who made dose measurements under identical experimental conditions.


Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Studies at the ORNL Health Physics Research Reactor

Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Studies at the ORNL Health Physics Research Reactor
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Release: 1977
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The Health Physics Research Reactor (HPRR), used unshielded, with a 12-cm-thick Lucite shield or a 13-cm-thick steel shield, provided three neutron and gamma-ray spectra for personnel dosimetry intercomparison studies. The characterisitcs of these fields, such as neutron energy spectrum, intensity, and uniformity, had been measured previously during nuclear accident dosimetry studies. Exposures were made to simulate total exposures likely to be encountered in personnel dosimetry. Neutron dose equivalents of the order of 500 mrem were produced. Dosimeters were mounted on the trunk section of water-filled phantoms, the front edges of which were located three meters from the reactor center. When shields were used they were placed at two meters. Sulfur pellets exposed at a standard location on the reactor during the intercomparison were used to calculate values of tissue kerma for neutrons at the three meter position based on previous measurements. Hurst proportional counter measurements made at the time of the exposures are in good agreement with these results. The gamma component of dose, typically of the order of a few tens of mrad, was measured with LiF thermoluminescent dosimeters (TLD's). Using the fission yield and the calculated leakage of the HPRR, the neutron fluence was calculated for each reactor run. Then the dose was calculated based on the HPRR neutron spectra and the dose conversion factors which had been calculated previously for the three spectra. The results of these personnel dosimetry intercomparison studies reveal that estimates of dose equivalent vary over a wide range. The standard deviation of the mean of participants data was typically in the range of +-30 to +-40%. It is anticipated that this type of dosimetry intercomparison study will be worthwhile on an annual basis until the problems in dosimeter response and interpretation have been identified and solved.


Sixth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study

Sixth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study
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Release: 1981
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The Sixth Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study was conducted March 25 to 27, 1980, at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Dosimeters from 28 participating agencies were mounted on anthropomorphic phantoms and exposed to a range of low-level dose equivalents (1.8 to 11.5 mSv neutron, 0.1 to 1.1 mSv gamma) which could be encountered during routine personnel monitoring in mixed radiation fields. The Health Physics Research Reactor (HPRR) operated in the steady-state mode served as the source of radiation for six separate exposures. Lucite and concrete shields along with the unshielded reactor were used to provide three different neutron and gamma spectra. Results reported by the participating agencies showed that TLD-albedo and TLD-700 dosimeters generally provided the most accurate measurements of neutron and gamma dose equivalents, respectively. Film was found to be unsatisfactory for measuring neutron doses produced by HPRR spectra in that measured dose equivalents were much lower than reference values. The TLD-100 dosimeters yielded gamma doses which were much too high indicating that this dosimeter type is generally unsuitable for use in mixed radiation fields similar to those encountered in this study without the use of large correction factors. Although the overall reported results exhibited improvement in performance relative to previous intercomparison studies, the composite measured data showed variations of more than a factor of 2 between measurements of the same exposure made by different agencies.


Eleventh ORNL Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study, May 22-23, 1985

Eleventh ORNL Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study, May 22-23, 1985
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Release: 1986
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The Eleventh Personnel Dosimetry Intercomparison Study was conducted at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) during May 22-23, 1985. Dosimeter badges from 44 participating organizations were mounted on Lucite block phantoms and exposed to four mixed-radiation fields with neutron dose equivalents around 5 mSv and gamma dose equivalents between 0.1 and 0.7 mSv. Results of this study indicated that no participants had difficulty obtaining measurable indication of neutron exposure at the provided dose equivalent levels, and very few had difficulty obtaining indication of gamma exposure at dose equivalents as low as 0.10 mSv. Average neutron results for all dosimeter types were within 20% of reference values with no obvious spectrum dependence. Different dosimeter types (albedo, direct interaction TLD, film, recoil track, and combination albedo-track) with 10 or more reported measurements provided average results within 35% of reference values for all spectra. With regard to precision, about 80% of the reported neutron results had single standard deviations within 10% at the means which indicates that precision is not a problem relative to accuracy for most participants. Average gamma results were greater than reference values by factors of 1.07 to 1.52 for the four exposures with TLD systems being more accurate than film. About 80% of all neutron results and 67% of all gamma results met regulatory standards for measurement accuracy and approximately 70% of all neutron data satisfied national dosimetry accreditation criteria for accuracy plus precision. In general, neutron dosimeter performance observed in this intercomparison was much improved compared to that observed in the prior studies while gamma dosimeter performance was about the same.