Abstract
The use of 226Ra-activated markings was specific for military equipment some decades ago and the extent of possible internal exposure of former military personnel due to ingestion of 226Ra is an issue of discussion. Whole- or partial-body counts are not sensitive enough to trace an overexposure due to a possible 226Ra uptake four decades ago. Thus retrospective workplace assessments are needed. These are done by wiping tests with linen and skin pads on 226Ra markings on decommissioned military equipment. The contamination investigations are performed in wipe-activity measuring cycles with exponentially increasing numbers of wipes. The activity wiped off does not increase with the number of wipes but levels off instead. Wipes with linen pads are more effective than wipes with skin. The skin-skin activity transfer is investigated by respective wipes too. The maximum committed dose in a typical scenario is calculated under worst case assumptions. For the typical work of 1 y an effective dose of about 70 μSv, and for the bone surface a dose of about 3 mSv, is obtained.
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