Abstract

We evaluate the ability of the Canberra Alpha Beta Environmental Continuous Air Monitor (ECAM) to detect and quantify airborne radiological contamination. The ECAM essentially consists of a passively-implanted planar silicon (PIPS) detector near a particulate filter through which outside air is pulled. Three years’ worth of background measurements on three different systems were assessed and calibrated to compensate for changing conditions and develop an average background response for the systems. The ECAM was also exposed to several radionuclides of interest, including 235U and 239Pu, to measure the response to alpha and beta particle sources. Both standard calibration sources and custom sources consisting of aqueous radioisotope solutions absorbed into clean filters. The ECAM responses to these sources were then scaled to quantities of interest and injected on the averaged background. Various alarm algorithms were evaluated on the source-injected spectra for minimum detectable air concentration for a given false alarm rate. Even in the worst case, the ECAM was able to detect radionuclides of interest at 10% of the Derived Response Level (DRL) for each isotope based on early-phase Protective Action Guides (PAG). Quantification of the radionuclides was also evaluated for the various algorithms, with mixed results, but overall clearly indicating the optimal algorithms for alpha and beta particle alarm and quantification. Finally, a limited evaluation of the beta particle detection efficiency points to a detection energy threshold of approximately 290 keV.

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