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Physical and dosimetric properties of NaCl pellets made in-house for the use in prospective optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry applications

Waldner, Lovisa LU orcid and Bernhardsson, Christian LU orcid (2018) In Radiation Measurements 119. p.52-57
Abstract

In this paper, NaCl pellets are produced in-house from ordinary household salt using simple and accessible methods, for the purpose of suggesting a cost-effective and available tool for various optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry applications. First, the pellets are investigated in terms of optimal configuration by varying combinations of grain sizes and compression forces. Then, the pellets with the optimal configuration are further investigated in terms of dosimetric properties such as signal-dose response, dose estimation, reproducibility, radiation induced sensitisation, detection limits and signal stability over time. The radiation induced OSL signals are read at room temperature and dose estimations are performed using one... (More)

In this paper, NaCl pellets are produced in-house from ordinary household salt using simple and accessible methods, for the purpose of suggesting a cost-effective and available tool for various optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry applications. First, the pellets are investigated in terms of optimal configuration by varying combinations of grain sizes and compression forces. Then, the pellets with the optimal configuration are further investigated in terms of dosimetric properties such as signal-dose response, dose estimation, reproducibility, radiation induced sensitisation, detection limits and signal stability over time. The radiation induced OSL signals are read at room temperature and dose estimations are performed using one calibration dose. The optimal pellet configuration, for the three salts investigated, was achieved with 100–400 μm sized salt grains and a compression force of 3.0 ± 0.5 tons. With the proposed NaCl pellets, readout and calibration procedure, it is possible to achieve a linear dose response in the dose range from 0 to 300 mGy. When using a calibration dose for signal normalisation the reproducibility of the radiation induced OSL signal is within 1.5% and when using the most optimal calibration dose for each salt the estimated dose is within 3% of the given dose. The detection limits for the salts investigated are, in terms of minimum detectable dose, between 5 and 21 μGy. Considering these findings and the overall cost of manufacturing NaCl pellets i.e. the worldwide availability, the proposed method opens for radiation protection measurements that have so far been too expensive or impossible.

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author
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organization
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type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Radiation Measurements
volume
119
pages
6 pages
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85053187817
ISSN
1350-4487
DOI
10.1016/j.radmeas.2018.09.001
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9ada8502-a721-4049-a04c-e326083f5320
date added to LUP
2018-10-08 10:46:59
date last changed
2022-05-03 06:33:08
@article{9ada8502-a721-4049-a04c-e326083f5320,
  abstract     = {{<p>In this paper, NaCl pellets are produced in-house from ordinary household salt using simple and accessible methods, for the purpose of suggesting a cost-effective and available tool for various optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry applications. First, the pellets are investigated in terms of optimal configuration by varying combinations of grain sizes and compression forces. Then, the pellets with the optimal configuration are further investigated in terms of dosimetric properties such as signal-dose response, dose estimation, reproducibility, radiation induced sensitisation, detection limits and signal stability over time. The radiation induced OSL signals are read at room temperature and dose estimations are performed using one calibration dose. The optimal pellet configuration, for the three salts investigated, was achieved with 100–400 μm sized salt grains and a compression force of 3.0 ± 0.5 tons. With the proposed NaCl pellets, readout and calibration procedure, it is possible to achieve a linear dose response in the dose range from 0 to 300 mGy. When using a calibration dose for signal normalisation the reproducibility of the radiation induced OSL signal is within 1.5% and when using the most optimal calibration dose for each salt the estimated dose is within 3% of the given dose. The detection limits for the salts investigated are, in terms of minimum detectable dose, between 5 and 21 μGy. Considering these findings and the overall cost of manufacturing NaCl pellets i.e. the worldwide availability, the proposed method opens for radiation protection measurements that have so far been too expensive or impossible.</p>}},
  author       = {{Waldner, Lovisa and Bernhardsson, Christian}},
  issn         = {{1350-4487}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{12}},
  pages        = {{52--57}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Radiation Measurements}},
  title        = {{Physical and dosimetric properties of NaCl pellets made in-house for the use in prospective optically stimulated luminescence dosimetry applications}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.radmeas.2018.09.001}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.radmeas.2018.09.001}},
  volume       = {{119}},
  year         = {{2018}},
}