• DocumentCode
    1487384
  • Title

    The Advancement of a Technique Using Principal Component Analysis for the Non-Intrusive Depth Profiling of Radioactive Contamination

  • Author

    Adams, Jamie C. ; Joyce, Malcolm J. ; Mellor, Matthew

  • Author_Institution
    Engineering Department, Lancaster University, Lancaster,
  • Volume
    59
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2012
  • Firstpage
    1448
  • Lastpage
    1452
  • Abstract
    A significant development of the principal component analysis technique, to non-intrusively infer the depth of the fission fragment cesium-137, when it is buried under silica sand has been described. In this paper we describe the advancement of the technique by further validating it using blind tests for applications outside of the laboratory, where not only the depth (z) but also the surface (x, y) location of \\gamma -ray emitting contamination is often poorly characterized. Also uncertainty analysis has been conducted to test the robustness of the technique. At present the technique has been tested at the point of maximum activity above the entrained \\gamma -ray emitting source (where the optimal x , y location is known). This is not usually practical in poorly characterized environments where the detector cannot be conveniently placed at such an optimal location to begin with and scanning at multiple points around the region of interest is often required. Using a uniform scanning time, the point of maximum intensity can be located by sampling in terms of total count rate, and converging on this optimal point of maximum intensity.
  • Keywords
    Contamination; Detectors; Phantoms; Principal component analysis; Radioactive materials; Depth profiling; gamma spectroscopy; gamma-rays; principal component analysis (PCA); radioactive contamination; shielding;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9499
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TNS.2012.2189128
  • Filename
    6179352