Abstract

Thick walled cavity ionization chambers are used by primary standard laboratories as primary air kerma standards in 137Cs and 60Co γ-rays. Application of the cavity theory requires correction for the effects of photon attenuation and scattering in the chamber walls. For more than a decade there have been intensive discussions about the validity of wall correction factors determined by more traditional extrapolation methods versus those calculated by Monte Carlo methods. For existing primary standards the alternative methods lead to results that differ by up to 50% of the correction itself. This report presents both experimental and theoretical results which strongly support the validity of calculated wall correction factors. Moreover, it is demonstrated that, in selected cases, the application of a linear extrapolation method leads to errors in the determination of the air kerma reaching up to 13%.

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