Abstract

In the last decade, the International Commission on Radiological Protection recommended a reduction in the annual limits to the dose to the lens of the eye from 150 mSv to 20 mSv y-1, averaged over defined periods of 5 y, with no single year exceeding 50 mSv. To assist the health physics community in this task, many groups have calculated protection and operational fluence dose coefficients. This led to the publication of multiple coefficient tables that were calculated for arrays of different parameters, including particle type, angle of incidence, target phantom models, presence or absence of secondary charged particle equilibrium, etc. The coefficients available in the literature include protection dose values calculated in a realistic eye model and operational values calculated in a simplified cylindrical head phantom at a point 3 mm below the surface. This paper reports on a simple Windows™ application that was written to aid health physics professionals in accessing and using the large body of available protection and operational eye-lens data. The application is called the Eye-Lens Dose Calculator, as it also performs calculations of the eye-lens dose for radionuclides, where the complete emissions of the selected radionuclides are considered. Test cases show that there is good agreement between the calculated protection and operational dose quantities when radionuclide emission characteristics are considered.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call