DocumentCode
907307
Title
Impact of Instrument Response Variations on Health Physics Measurements
Author
Armantrout, Guy A.
Author_Institution
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory P. O. Box 808 Livermore, CA 94550
Volume
32
Issue
1
fYear
1985
Firstpage
918
Lastpage
922
Abstract
Uncertainties in estimating the potential health impact of a given radiation exposure include instrument measurement error in determining exposure and difficulty in relating this exposure to an effective dose value. Instrument error can be due to design or manufacturing deficiencies, limitations of the sensing element used, and calibration and maintenance of the instrument. This paper evaluates the errors which can be introduced by design deficiencies and limitations of the sensing element for a wide variety of commonly used survey instruments. The results indicate little difference among sensing element choice for general survey work, with variations among specific instrument designs being the major factor. Ion chamber instruments tend to be the best for all around use, while scintillator-based units should not be used where accurate measurements are required. The need to properly calibrate and maintain an instrument appears to be the most important factor in instrument accuracy.
Keywords
Calibration; Geometry; Inductors; Instruments; Laboratories; Manufacturing; Measurement errors; Radiation monitoring; Reactor instrumentation; Scattering;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.1985.4336967
Filename
4336967
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