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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The effect of high dose rate on tissue equivalent proportional counter measurements in mixed neutron-gamma fields

Qashua, Nael 01 April 2010 (has links)
Tissue equivalent proportional counters (TEPCs) are commonly used for radiation monitoring in areas where a mixture of neutron and photon radiations may be present, such as those commonly encountered in nuclear power plants. In such radiation fields, the dose rate of each component can vary drastically from extremely low to very high. Among these possible combinations of radiation fields with very different dose rates, a mixed field of an intense photon and a weak neutron dose component is the more commonly encountered. This study describes the measurement of lineal energy spectra carried out with a 5.1 cm (2 inch) diameter spherical TEPC simulating a 2 μm diameter tissue site in low energy (33 – 330 keV neutrons) mixed photon-neutron fields with varying dose rates generated by the McMaster University 1.25 MV double stage Tandetron accelerator. The Tandetron accelerator facility was employed to produce neutrons using thick 7Li targets via the 7Li(p, n)7Be reaction. A continuous spectrum of neutrons is generated at any selected proton beam energy which is very narrow at beam energies very close to the threshold of the reaction 1.88 MeV and becomes wider as the proton beam energy moves further away from the threshold energy of the reaction. Dose rates which resulted in dead times as high as 75% for the data acquisition system were employed to study the effect of dose rate on the measured quality factors, microdosimetric averages (y ̅_f and y ̅_D)absorbed dose and dose equivalent. The dose rate at a given beam energy was varied by changing the accelerator beam current. A variety of mixed neutron gamma fields was generated using neutron beams with mean energies extending approximately from 33 keV to 330 keV with the 7Li target using proton beam energies ranging from 1.89 to 2.5 MeV. In direct beams, 478 keV photons which are produced in the 7Li target via inelastic scattering interaction 7Li(p, p'γ)7Li dominate the low LET component of the mixed field of radiation. When a 2 cm thick polyethylene moderator was inserted between the neutron producing target and the counter, the low LET component of the mixed radiation field also contained 2.20 MeV gamma rays originating from 1H(n, γ)2H capture interactions in the moderator. We have observed that high dose rates due to both photons and neutrons in a mixed field of radiation result in pile up of pulses and distort the lineal energy spectrum measured under these conditions. The pile up effect and hence the distortion in the lineal energy spectrum becomes prominent with dose rates which result in dead times larger than 25% for the high LET radiation component. In intense neutron fields, which may amount to 75% dead time, a 50% or even larger increase in values for the measured microsdosimetric averages and the neutron quality factor was observed. This study demonstrates that moderate dose rates which do not result in dead times of more than 20-25% due to either of the component radiations or due to both components of mixed field radiation generate results which are acceptable for operational health physics mixed neutron-gamma radiation monitoring using tissue equivalent proportional counters. / UOIT
2

Simulation and Analysis of a Tissue Equivalent Proportional Counter Using the Monte Carlo Transport Code FLUKA

Northum, Jeremy Dell 2010 May 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine how well the Monte Carlo transport code FLUKA can simulate a tissue-equivalent proportional counter (TEPC) and produce the expected delta ray events when exposed to high energy heavy ions (HZE) like in the galactic cosmic ray (GCR) environment. Accurate transport codes are desirable because of the high cost of beam time, the inability to measure the mixed field GCR on the ground and the flexibility they offer in the engineering and design process. A spherical TEPC simulating a 1 um site size was constructed in FLUKA and its response was compared to experimental data for an 56Fe beam at 360 MeV/nucleon. The response of several narrow beams at different impact parameters were used to explain the features of the response of the same detector exposed to a uniform field of radiation. Additionally, an investigation was made into the effect of the wall thickness on the response of the TEPC and the range of delta rays in the tissue-equivalent (TE) wall material. A full impact parameter test (from IP = 0 to IP = detector radius) was performed to show that FLUKA produces the expected wall effect. That is, energy deposition in the gas volume can occur even when the primary beam does not pass through the gas volume. A final comparison to experimental data was made for the simulated TEPC exposed to various broad beams in the energy range of 200 - 1000 MeV/nucleon. FLUKA overestimated energy deposition in the gas volume in all cases. The FLUKA results differed from the experimental data by an average of 25.2 % for yF and 12.4 % for yD. It is suggested that this difference can be reduced by adjusting the FLUKA default ionization potential and density correction factors.
3

Monte Carlo simulations of solid walled proportional counters with different site size for HZE radiation

Wang, Xudong 15 May 2009 (has links)
Characterizing high z high energy (HZE) particles in cosmic radiation is of importance for the study of the equivalent dose to astronauts. Low pressure, tissue equivalent proportional counters (TEPC) are routinely used to evaluate radiation exposures in space. A multiple detector system composed of three TEPC of different sizes was simulated using the Monte-Carlo software toolkit GEANT4. The ability of the set of detectors to characterize HZE particles, as well as measure dose, was studied. HZE particles produce energetic secondary electrons (-rays) which carry a significant fraction of energy lost by the primary ion away from its track. The range and frequency of these delta rays depends on the velocity and charge of the primary ion. Measurements of lineal energy spectra in different size sites will differ because of these delta ray events and may provide information to characterize the incident primary particle. Monte Carlo calculations were accomplished, using GEANT4, simulating solid walled proportional detectors with unit density site diameter of 0.1, 0.5 and 2.5 µm in a uniform HZE particle field. The simulated spherical detectors have 2 mm thick tissue equivalent walls. The uniform beams of 1 GeV/n, 500 MeV/n and 100 MeV/n 56Fe, 28Si, 16O, 4He and proton particles were used to bombard the detector. The size effect of such a detector system was analyzed with the calculation results. The results show that the y vs. yf(y) spectrum differs significantly as a function of site size. From the spectra, as well as the calculated mean lineal energy, the simulated particles can be characterized. We predict that the detector system is capable of characterizing HZE particles in a complex field. This suggests that it may be practical to use such a system to measure the average particle velocity as well as the absorbed dose delivered by HZE particles in space. The parameters used in the simulation are also good references for detector construction. characterizing HZE particles in a complex field. This suggests that it may be practical to use such a system to measure the average particle velocity as well as the absorbed dose delivered by HZE particles in space. The parameters used in the simulation are also good references for detector construction.
4

Development and Test of a GEM-Based TEPC for Neutron Protection Dosimetry

Seydaliev, Marat Radikovich 12 February 2007 (has links)
The effective dose equivalent, H (or the effective dose, E ) to an individual is the primary limiting quantity in radiation protection. However, techniques for measuring H for neutrons have not been fully developed. In this regard a new tissue equivalent proportional counter (TEPC) based on a gas electron multiplier (GEM) for measuring H*(10), which is a conservative estimate of H, for neutrons was designed and constructed. The deposited energy distribution for two different neutron sources (a Cf-252 source and a AmBe source) was measured using the new TEPC. The measurements were performed using two different proportional gases: P-10 gas and a propane-based tissue equivalent gas at various pressures. A computer simulation of the new TEPC, based on the Monte Carlo method, was performed in order to obtain the pulse height distributions for the two neutron sources. The simulated results and the measured results were compared. Results show that the experimental results agree with the computational results within 20% of accuracy for both Cf-252 and AmBe neutron sources. A new model GEM-based TEPC was developed for use in obtaining H*(10). The value of H*(10) for the Cf-252 source and for the AmBe source using experimental measurements was obtained. These results are presented in this study. The study shows that the GEM-based TEPC can successfully estimate H*(10). With these results and some refinements, this GEM-based TEPC can directly be used as a neutron rem meter.
5

Development of an Advanced Two-Dimensional Microdosimetric Detector based on THick Gas Electron Multipliers / Development of an Advanced 2D THGEM Microdosimetric Detector

Darvish-Molla, Sahar January 2016 (has links)
The THick Gas Electron Multiplier (THGEM) based tissue-equivalent proportional counter (TEPC) has been proven to be useful for microdosimetry due to its flexibility in varying the gaseous sensitive volume and achieving high multiplication gain. Aiming at measuring the spatial distribution of radiation dose for mixed neutron-gamma fields, an advanced two-dimensional (2D) THGEM TEPC was designed and constructed at McMaster University which will enable us to overcome the operational limitation of the classical TEPCs, particularly for high dose rate fields. Compared to the traditional TEPCs, anode wire electrodes were replaced by THGEM layer, which not only enhances the gas multiplication gain but also offers a flexible and convenient fabrication or building 2D detectors. The 2D THGEM TEPC consists of an array of 3×3 sensitive volumes, equivalent to 9 individual TEPCs, each of which has a dimension of 5 mm diameter and length. Taking the overall cost, size and flexibility into account, to process 9 detectors signals simultaneously, a multi-input digital pulse processing system was developed by using modern microcontrollers, each of which is coupled to a 12-bit sampling ADC with a sampling rate of 42 Msps. The signal processing system was tested using a NaI(Tl) detector, which has proven that is it faster than a traditional analogue system and a commercial digital system. Using the McMaster Tandetron 7Li(p,n) accelerator neutron source, both fundamental detector performance, as well as neutron dosimetric response of the 2D THGEM TEPC, has been extensively investigated and compared to the data acquired by a spherical TEPC. It was shown that the microdosimetric response and the measured absorbed dose rate of the 2D THGEM detector developed in this study are comparable to the standard 1/2" TEPC which is commercially available. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

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