Dosimetry equipment Flashcards

1
Q

When do we measure radiation in healthcare?

A
  • Patient dose (risk): effective and organ dose.
  • Occupational dose: ALARP.
  • Area monitoring: room shielding, “other persons” dose.
  • Calibration in NM: how much isotope?
  • Equipment performance: QA/calibration.
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2
Q

What are the physical dose quantities and how can we link them to protection dose quantities?

A
  • Exposure [dQ/dm].
  • Air KERMA.
  • Absorbed Dose [dE/dm].
  • calculation and phantoms links to protection quantities.
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3
Q

What are the operational dose quantities and how can we link them to protection dose quantities?

A
  • Ambient dose equivalent H*(d)
  • Personal Dose equivalent Hp(d)
  • Measurable approximation to link to protection quantities.
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4
Q

What are the protection dose quantities?

A
  • Equivalent organ dose (HT)

- Effective dose (E)

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5
Q

What is the ICRU sphere?

A
  • Theoretical sphere, 0.3m diameter with density of 1000kg/m^3 and a mass composition equivalent to tissue.
  • Radiation field expanded and aligned so that it encompasses the sphere and the quantity is independent of the angular distribution of the radiation field.
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6
Q

What is the ambient dose equivalent and how is it obtained?

A
  • Operational quantity for area monitoring (strongly penetrating radiation only).
  • H*(10) in a radiation field is the dose equivalent that would be produced by the corresponding ‘expanded and aligned field’ in the ICRU sphere at a depth of 10mm, on the radius opposing the direction of the aligned field.
  • Good estimate for effective dose E [Sv].
  • Obtained through calibration chain and published conversion factors (convert photon fluence, air KERMA or exposure to H(10) or H(0.07).
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7
Q

What is the personal dose equivalent and which depths should be used for effective dose, skin dose and eye dose?

A
  • Operational quantity for personal dose.
  • The equivalent dose that would be generated in a depth ‘d’ from the surface of a person.
  • Hp(10): good estimate of effective dose to a person.
  • Hp(0.07): for skin.
  • Hp(3): for lens of eye.
  • Measured with a dosimeter that is worn at the surface of the body and covered with tissue equivalent material.
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8
Q

Describe how an ion chamber works.

A
  • Contains air at normal atmospheric pressure.
  • 2 electrodes with p.d of ~ few hundred volts.
  • Radiation causes ionization of air - creates charge pairs.
  • e- and ions accelerated towards electrodes.
  • Charge collected and measured.
  • Current is proportional to dose.
  • Ion recombination can occur.
  • Sensitivity is proportional to the mass of air.
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9
Q

How can we relate the exposure measured with an ion chamber to air KERMA?

A
  • 33.7eV to make an ion pair.

- KERMA = 33.7(Q/em) eVKg^-1 (convert to mGy)

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10
Q

State the positives and negatives of using an ion chamber.

A

Good:
-Measures air KERMA
-Gives linear response across large dynamic range.
-Variety of chamber sizes: large increases sensitivity, small increases spatial resolution.
-Excellent for standards: cross calibration.
-Can measure dose rate or dose accumulate.
Bad:
-Electrometer readout: limited by leakage current.
-Temperature and pressure corrections required.

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11
Q

Describe how a GM tube works.

A
  • Sealed chamber contains very low pressure gas.
  • 2 electrodes with very high p.d. between them ~400-800V.
  • Radiation causes creation of ion pairs.
  • e- accelerated by high voltages and causes further ionization.
  • Chain reaction until saturation and a pulse is detected by the electronics.
  • Measures in CPS but can be calibrated to measure μSv/hr within specific E range.
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12
Q

State the positives and negatives of using a GM tube.

A

Good:
-~1000 x increased sensitivity c.f. ion chamber.
-Can detect all radiation types.
-Low dose measurements - contamination monitoring.
-Cheap.
Bad:
-Poor at high doserates: dead time, 10^4-10^5 CPS limit.
-Poor energy response output (pulse always the same regardless of energy of radiation).

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13
Q

Describe how a scintillation detector works.

A
  • Phosphor as detection medium e.g. NaI crystal.
  • Radiation excites e-s, releases flash of light.
  • light hits photo cathode: e-s released.
  • PMT: e-s accelerated by dynodes, amplifying signal.
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14
Q

State the positives and negatives of using a scintillation detector.

A

Good:
-High sensitivity, ~1000 x ion chamber.
-Size of pulses can be related to energy of radiation.
Bad:
-Low intrinsic efficiency of detection for high energy gamma rays.
-Reduced resolution in large crystals since some of the light photons will not reach the detector.
-Crystals sensitive to temp. changes, may crack.

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15
Q

Describe how a solid state detector works.

A
  • Radiation creates electron-hole pairs in semiconductor.
  • no of electron-hole pairs proportional to energy of rad.
  • e-s and holes move to electrodes: measurable voltage.
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16
Q

Describe how a TLD badge works.

A
  • e.g. LiF
  • When irradiated, e-s stored in meta-stable states within crystal structure.
  • Heat badge to ~few hundred degrees to release e-s from traps.
  • e-s fall back to ground state releasing visible, UV and IR light which is measured using PMT.
  • Intensity of light released is related to dose.
17
Q

State the positives and negatives of using a TLD badge.

A
Good:
-Linear response to dose.
-High sensitivity to dose.
-Response is energy independent.
-Reusable after readout.
Bad:
-Needs to be sent off to ADS, no immediate readout.
-Doses cannot be re-read.
18
Q

Describe how Gafchromic film works.

A
  • Contains dye that changes colour upon exposure.
  • Dose obtained via a lookup table or calibration curve.
  • Results can be obtained almost instantly.
  • Very poor response <1cGy - good for RT and primary beam.