Abstract

Alanine dosimetry is useful for transfer dosimetry by long distance mailing, because of its stability. It has the advantage that the measurement of electron spin resonance (ESR) spectral signal is non-destructive to the dosimeter, with the promise that the method may supply archival dosimetry data, depending on the degree of post-irradiation stability of the signal. The effects of temperature during irradiation and storage on fading of the ESR signal were studied using an alanine dosimeter molded with polystyrene (alanine-PS dosimeter). This investigation covered a long range of storage time (up to 160 days) after irradiation to absorbed doses in the range 1 to 100 kGy, for application to transfer dosimetry between Japan and neighboring Asian countries. Dose response of an alanine-PS dosimeter depends on the temperature during irradiation. The same temperature coefficient of +0.24%/°C was measured at different dose levels of 1, 10 and 100 kGy administered at a constant dose rate of 7 kGy/h. Fading of the dose response was measured under storage at various temperatures (5–40°C). The fading curve generally has two phases with fast and slow fading rates. The response of an alanine dosimeter is relatively stable for doses of 1.4 and 14 kGy, when stored at temperatures below 25°C. However, the degree of fading was roughly 3 and 5% under a storage temperature of 40°C for 5 and 100 days, respectively, after irradiation to 14 kGy. The fading percentages at 100 kGy were 2 and 4% (after 5 days) and 6 and 15% (after 100 days) under the storage temperature of 25 and 40°C, respectively. The fading rates have a relatively small dependence on irradiation temperature. This is observed even when irradiation are made at high temperatures (60°C) and for the doses 100 kGy and above. The mechanism of decay of radicals is discussed to explain the fading characteristics of the two phases of fading. The alanine-PS dosimeter is useful for transfer standard dosimetry up to a dose level of 10 kGy when stored after irradiation at temperature below 40°C. However, consideration of temperature effects during and after irradiation is vital for accurate transfer dosimetry of high doses, especially in the southern Asian countries.

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