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1.
Radiat Prot Dosimetry ; 116(1-4 Pt 2): 449-53, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16604676

ABSTRACT

The radiation fields outside the planned experimental Sub-critical Assembly in Dubna (SAD) have been studied in order to provide a basis for the design of the concrete shielding that cover the reactor core. The effective doses around the reactor, induced by leakage of neutrons and photons through the shielding, have been determined for a shielding thickness varying from 100 to 200 cm. It was shown that the neutron flux and the effective dose is higher above the shielding than at the side of it, owing to the higher fraction of high-energy spallation neutrons emitted in the direction of the incident beam protons. At the top, the effective dose was found to be -150 microSv s(-1) for a concrete thickness of 100 cm, while -2.5 microSv s(-1) for a concrete thickness of 200 cm. It was also shown that the high-energy neutrons (> 10 MeV), which are created in the proton-induced spallation interactions in the target, contribute for the major part of the effective doses outside the reactor.


Subject(s)
Construction Materials/analysis , Models, Statistical , Nuclear Reactors/instrumentation , Particle Accelerators/instrumentation , Radiation Monitoring/methods , Radiation Protection/instrumentation , Radiation Protection/methods , Computer Simulation , Computer-Aided Design , Equipment Failure Analysis , Monte Carlo Method , Radiation Dosage , Russia
2.
Phys Med Biol ; 44(9): 2099-125, 1999 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10495108

ABSTRACT

The absorbed dose due to photonuclear reactions in soft tissue, lung, breast, adipose tissue and cortical bone has been evaluated for a scanned bremsstrahlung beam of end point 50 MeV from a racetrack accelerator. The Monte Carlo code MCNP4B was used to determine the photon source spectrum from the bremsstrahlung target and to simulate the transport of photons through the treatment head and the patient. Photonuclear particle production in tissue was calculated numerically using the energy distributions of photons derived from the Monte Carlo simulations. The transport of photoneutrons in the patient and the photoneutron absorbed dose to tissue were determined using MCNP4B; the absorbed dose due to charged photonuclear particles was calculated numerically assuming total energy absorption in tissue voxels of 1 cm3. The photonuclear absorbed dose to soft tissue, lung, breast and adipose tissue is about (0.11-0.12)+/-0.05% of the maximum photon dose at a depth of 5.5 cm. The absorbed dose to cortical bone is about 45% larger than that to soft tissue. If the contributions from all photoparticles (n, p, 3He and 4He particles and recoils of the residual nuclei) produced in the soft tissue and the accelerator, and from positron radiation and gammas due to induced radioactivity and excited states of the nuclei, are taken into account the total photonuclear absorbed dose delivered to soft tissue is about 0.15+/-0.08% of the maximum photon dose. It has been estimated that the RBE of the photon beam of 50 MV acceleration potential is approximately 2% higher than that of conventional 60Co radiation.


Subject(s)
Models, Biological , Radiometry/methods , Radiotherapy/methods , Absorption , Adipose Tissue/radiation effects , Bone and Bones/radiation effects , Breast/radiation effects , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Female , Humans , Lung/radiation effects , Male , Monte Carlo Method , Neutrons , Phantoms, Imaging , Photons , Radiotherapy/instrumentation , Tissue Distribution
4.
Phys Rev A ; 46(2): 1132-1135, 1992 Jul 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9908220
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