Abstract

A photon transport capability has been implemented and verified in the Monte Carlo code MCS of Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology for the purpose of radiation shielding studies. The MCS photon fixed-source mode simulates the transport of photons between 1 keV and 20 MeV for all elements from hydrogen to fermium. The specific physics for the main four photo-atomic reactions (Rayleigh scattering, Compton scattering, photoelectric effect and pair production) and three secondary processes of photon production (positron–electron annihilation, atomic relaxation and electron/positron bremsstrahlung) are reviewed. Verification results against Monte Carlo codes MCNP6.1 and SERPENT2.1.29 are presented. The verification cases include the comparison of energy distributions of photon flux in an infinite medium, of spatial distributions of photon flux in a cylinder, of the spatial distribution of photon body-equivalent dose in a spent nuclear fuel transport cask, and of photon KERMA (Kinetic Energy Released per MAss) in photon detector calibration geometries. Good calculation/calculation agreement is observed overall, with some marked differences in the detailed photon flux comparison at given energy ranges traced back to differences in photon physics implementation. MCS can from now on be applied for the purpose of advanced photon studies and corresponding validation against experimental shielding benchmarks will follow in the future.

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