Basic Principles of Radiation Protection
Basic Principles of Radiation Protection
The charge of one electron equals to 1.6x10-19 Coulomb (C) or in relative units to –1. The charge
of the nucleus Z is positive and equal in relative units to serial number of current chemical
element in Periodic table of elements.
Ionizing radiation is produced by radioactive decay, nuclear reactions,
like nuclear fission or nuclear fusion, and by particle accelerators that may produce,
e.g., fast electrons produced bremsstrahlung or synchrotron radiation.
The energy of radioactive decay is emitted as radiation in three main forms:
.
In order for radiation to be ionizing, the particles must both have a high enough energy and interact with the atom.
Charged particles such as beta particles (electrons or positrons), and alpha particles interact strongly with atomic
electrons.
Neutrons, on the other hand, do not interact strongly with electrons, and so they cannot directly ionize atoms.
They can interact with atomic nuclei, depending on the nucleus and their velocity,
these reactions happen with fast neutrons and slow neutrons,
depending on the situation. Neutron radiation often produces radioactive nuclei, which produce ionizing
radiation when they decay.
Gamma quanta do not ionize all along their path like alpha or beta particles . They interact with atomic
electrons by one of three effects: photoelectric effect, Compton effect, or pair production.
In every scattering event, the gamma quantum transfers energy to an electron, and it continues on its path in a different direction w
matter, chemical changes occur at the atomic level.
If the exposure is large enough these changes can be readily observed. For example, if glass is heavily
irradiated it changes colour. The amount of radiation absorbed per gram of matter is called the absorbed dose.
An ionization event normally produces a positive atomic ion and an electron. The negatively charged
electrons and positively charged ions created by ionizing radiation may cause damage in living tissue .
Much of the material on this page is the result of a Year 10 group work lesson, mainly using the
"Physics for You" textbook.
Each group presented their material to the class.
Smoke Detectors
Smoke alarms contain a weak source made of Americium-
241.
Alpha particles are emitted from here, which ionise the air,
so that the air conducts electricity and a small current flows.
If smoke enters the alarm, this absorbs the a particles, the
current reduces, and the alarm sounds.
Am-241 has a half-life of 460 years.
Thickness Control
In paper mills, the thickness of the paper can be controlled
by measuring how much beta radiation passes through the
paper to a Geiger counter.
Gamma rays are also used to sterilise hospital equipment, especially plastic syringes that would be
damaged if heated.
Radioactive Dating
When they die they stop taking Carbon in, then the
amount of Carbon-14 goes down at a known rate
(Carbon-14 has a half-life of 5700 years).
Radioactive Tracers
The most common tracer is called Technetium-99 and is very safe
because it only emits gamma rays and doesn't cause much ionisation.
Checking Welds
If a gamma source is placed on one side of the welded metal, and a photographic film on the other side, weak points or
air bubbles will show up on the film, like an X-ray.
Cancer Treatment
Because Gamma rays can kill living cells, they are used to kill
cancer cells without having to resort to difficult surgery. This
is called "Radiotherapy", and works because cancer cells can't
repair themselves when damaged by gamma rays, as healthy
cells can.
It's vital to get the dose correct - too much and you'll damage
too many healthy cells, too little and you won't stop the cancer
from spreading in time.