For the upgrade of existing dosimetric early warning networks in Europe spectrometric detectors based on CeBr3, LaBr3, SrI2, and CdZnTe are investigated as possible substitutes for the current ...detector generation which is mainly based on gas filled detectors. The additional information on the nuclide vector which can be derived from the spectra of γ-radiation is highly useful for an appropriate response in case of a nuclear or radiological accident.
The measured γ-spectra will be converted into ambient dose equivalent H*(10) using a method where the spectrum is subdivided into multiple energy bands. For each band the conversion coefficients from count rate to dose rate is determined. The derivation of these conversion coefficients is explained in this work. Both experimental and simulative approaches are investigated using quasi-mono-energetic γ-sources and synthetic spectra from Monte-Carlo simulations to determine the conversion coefficients for each detector type. Finally, precision of the obtained characterization is checked by irradiation of the detectors in different well-known photon fields with traceable dose rates.
•Spectro-dosimeters can replace existing dosimeters of early warning networks.•They can be characterized experimentally and with Monte-Carlo simulations.•Precision is similar or even better than that of a conventional dosemeter.•Potential to serve as advanced dosimetric secondary standards in the future.
Full text
Available for:
GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZRSKP
Abstract
A secondary standard for ambient dose equivalent, H*(10), is necessary for the dissemination of the unit Sievert (Sv), but there is no such standard commercially available currently. ...Furthermore, the measurement of H*(10) instead of calculating H*(10) from air kerma and conversion coefficients is needed for unknown radiation fields. We developed a prototype of a new secondary standard for H*(10) based on a spherical 1 l ionization chamber for air kerma. This chamber was modified with copper wires at the inner surface to adjust the response of the chamber according to H*(10). Additionally, a Makrolon shell and an aluminium coating were added to optimize the response at energies below 50 keV. The prototype fulfils the requirements given in ISO 4037-2 in the energy range from 12 keV to 7 MeV. In combination with an electrometer, it can be used as area dosemeter, suitable for pulsed fields and for low energy radiation.
Conversion coefficients are a substantial vehicle in practical radiation protection to determine the dose (rate) of a given radiation field. According to ICRU report 57, their values shall be ...obtained by means of spectrometry. This is, however, a time-consuming complicated procedure that cannot be performed by all dosimetry laboratories. Therefore, it is desired to find acceptable alternative methods to replace spectrometry. One possibility is to set up the X-ray facility in accordance with international standard ISO 4037-1:1997 and use the tabulated values from that standard. However, this needs to be considered during the construction phase of the X-ray facility. In this work, the combined usage of half-value layer measurements and the effective energy (both with respect to air kerma) to determine the conversion coefficients is investigated and compared with the values obtained by spectrometry. The investigations utilise all combinations of the H-, W-, N- and L-series, reference distances of 1 and 2.5 m and aluminium and copper as attenuation materials. We find that for most of the radiation qualities, the investigated method results in conversion coefficients that show an unacceptable deviation from the conventionally true values. However, the values of conversion coefficients of selected N- and L-qualities could be reproduced with high accuracy (within ±1 %).
A new generation of dosemeters, based on the scintillators LaBr3, CeBr3 and SrI2, read out with conventional photomultipliers, to be used in the field of environmental gamma-radiation monitoring, was ...investigated. The main features of these new instruments and especially their outdoor performance, studied by long-term investigations under real weather conditions, are presented. The systems were tested at the reference sites for environmental radiation of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt. The measurements are compared with that of well characterized classical dose rate reference instruments to demonstrate the suitability of new spectrometers for environmental dose rate monitoring even in adverse weather conditions. Their potential to replace the (mainly Geiger Müller based) dose rate meters operated in about 5000 European early waning network stations as well as in environmental radiation monitoring in general is shown.
•A new generation of dosemeters, based on the scintillators was investigated.•Their suitability for environmental dose rate monitoring is demonstrated.•Their potential to replace dose rate meters is shown.•With an adopted evaluation software they can have almost ideal dosimetric properties.
Full text
Available for:
GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZRSKP
The present paper provides a summary of the collision-induced dissociation of protonated and deprotonated phase II metabolites of drugs and pesticides. This overview is based on published literature ...and unpublished data from the authors. In particular, glutathione conjugates and their biotransformation products are discussed in detail. In addition, the fragmentation of the major classes of conjugates, i.e. glucuronides, glucosides, malonylglucosides, sulfates, acetates, methyl and glycine conjugates, is reported. Collision-induced dissociation, as studied by tandem mass spectrometry, allows the rapid identification of the type of conjugate, whereas the exact conjugation site can in general be determined only by additional NMR experiments.
Full text
Available for:
GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK
Conversion coefficients (CCs) are an essential vehicle in radiation protection for the determination of the dose (rate) of a given radiation field. According to the current draft of the revision of ...international standard ISO 4037, an X-ray field is a reference field if the CCs of the field match the tabulated ISO values within 2%. Deviations of the high-voltage (HV) tube-potential from its nominal value influence the resulting spectra and change the corresponding CCs. This work investigates the maximum allowable deviation of the HV from its nominal value such that the requirements of ISO 4037 remain fulfilled. This is achieved using both synthetic spectra created by a software simulation program and spectra measured at one of the X-ray facilities of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt. The results are summarised in form of a new proposal for upper limit values which are suggested to be used in the next version of ISO 4037.
For the purpose of radiation protection, ICRU Report 57/ICRP Publication 74 provides a list of monoenergetic conversion coefficients to be used with, among others, photon reference fields generated ...with X-ray tubes. A comprehensive definition of these photon reference fields can be found in international standard ISO 4037; however, it lacks thorough indication of the allowed deviations of essential parameters that influence these X-ray reference fields. These parameters are the high-voltage tube potential, the thickness of the beryllium window and the purity and thickness of the filter materials used to create different radiation qualities. Small variations of these parameters can lead to significant changes in the created X-ray spectra and, hence, the spectra-dependent conversion coefficients for phantom-related radiation-protection quantities. This can lead to situations in which the conversion coefficients listed in ISO 4037 cannot be used, resulting in time-consuming spectrometry measurements. In this work, the impact on the resulting conversion coefficients is investigated using a simplified mathematical approximation model. The findings are validated with an independent X-ray spectra calculation programme. As a result, well-founded upper limit values on the allowed deviations of the essential X-ray tube parameters are proposed to be used in a future revision of ISO 4037.
We determine the metallicity distribution function (MDF) of the Galactic halo by means of a sample of 1638 metal-poor stars selected from the Hamburg/ESO objective-prism survey (HES). The sample was ...corrected for minor biases introduced by the strategy for spectroscopic follow-up observations of the metal-poor candidates, namely "best and brightest stars first". Comparison of the metallicities Fe/H of the stars determined from moderate-resolution (i.e., R similar to 2000) follow-up spectra with results derived from abundance analyses based on high-resolution spectra (i.e., R > 20 000) shows that the Fe/H estimates used for the determination of the halo MDF are accurate to within 0.3 dex, once highly C-rich stars are eliminated. We determined the selection function of the HES, which must be taken into account for a proper comparison between the HES MDF with MDFs of other stellar populations or those predicted by models of Galactic chemical evolution. The latter show a reasonable agreement with the overall shape of the HES MDF for Fe/H > -3.6, but only a model of Salvadori et al. (2007) with a critical metallicity for low-mass star formation of Z(cr) = 10(-3.4) Z(circle dot) reproduces the sharp drop at Fe/H similar to -3.6 present in the HES MDF. Although currently about ten stars at Fe/H < -3.6 are known, the evidence for the existence of a tail of the halo MDF extending to Fe/H similar to -5.5 is weak from the sample considered in this paper, because it only includes two stars Fe/H < -3.6. Therefore, a comparison with theoretical models has to await larger statistically complete and unbiased samples. A comparison of the MDF of Galactic globular clusters and of dSph satellites to the Galaxy shows qualitative agreement with the halo MDF, derived from the HES, once the selection function of the latter is included. However, statistical tests show that the differences between these are still highly significant.
Full text
Available for:
FMFMET, NUK, UL, UM, UPUK
In rat spinotrapezius muscle, chronic heart failure (CHF) speeds microvascular O2 pressure (pO2; index of O2 delivery-to-O2 uptake) dynamics across the rest-contractions transition Cardiovasc. Res. ...56 (2002) 479. Due to the mosaic nature of this muscle, the effect of CHF on microvascular pO2 dynamics in different fiber types remains unclear.
Based upon derangements of endothelial function and blood flow responses, we hypothesized that CHF would speed microvascular pO2 dynamics (reduced O2 delivery-to-O2 uptake ratio) in type I muscle (soleus, approximately 84% type I), but not in type II muscle (peroneal, approximately 86% type II J. Appl. Physiol. 80 (1996) 261).
Using phosphorescence quenching, microvascular pO2 was measured at rest and across the rest-contractions transition (1 Hz) in soleus and peroneal of non-infarcted control (control; n=7), and Sprague-Dawley rats with moderate (moderate; elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP) 10 +/- 2 mm Hg; n=10) and severe (severe; LVEDP 28 +/- 4 mm Hg; n=5) CHF.
The microvascular pO2 mean response time (time delay+time constant) was progressively speeded with increasing severity of CHF in soleus (control, 38.7 +/- 2.0; moderate, 29.1 +/- 1.5; severe, 22.5 +/- 3.9 s; P< or =0.05), but not in peroneal (control=moderate=severe).
As type I fibers are recruited predominately for moderate intensity exercise, the more rapid lowering of soleus microvascular pO2 in CHF would reduce the blood-muscle O2 driving gradient, exacerbate phosphocreatine and glycogen breakdown, and provide a mechanism for slowed O2 uptake kinetics and premature fatigue in CHF.
Mitochondrial dysfunction in various tissues has been associated with numerous conditions including aging. In testes, aging induces atrophy and a decline in male reproductive function but the ...involvement of mitochondria is not clear. The purpose of this study was to examine whether the mitochondrial profile differed with (1) aging, and (2) 10-weeks of treadmill exercise training, in the testes of young (6 month) and old (24 month) Fischer-344 (F344) animals. Old animals exhibited significant atrophy (30 % decline;
P
< 0.05) in testes compared to young animals. However, relative mitochondrial content was not reduced with age and this was consistent with the lack of change in the mitochondrial biogenesis regulator protein, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1-alpha and its downstream targets nuclear respiratory factor-1 and mitochondrial transcription factor A. No effect was observed in the pro- or anti-apoptotic proteins, Bax and Bcl-2, respectively, but age increased apoptosis inducing factor levels. Endurance training induced beneficial mitochondrial adaptations that were more prominent in old animals including greater increases in relative mtDNA content, biogenesis/remodeling (mitofusin 2), antioxidant capacity (mitochondrial superoxide dismutase) and lower levels of phosphorylated histone H2AX, an early marker of DNA damage (
P
< 0.05). Importantly, these exercise-induced changes were associated with an attenuation of testes atrophy in older sedentary animals (
P
< 0.05). Our results indicate that aging-induced atrophy in testes may not be associated with changes in relative mitochondrial content and key regulatory proteins and that exercise started in late-life elicits beneficial changes in mitochondria that may protect against age-induced testicular atrophy.