Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 348
Vol. 348
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 347
Vol. 347
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vols. 345-346
Vols. 345-346
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 344
Vol. 344
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 343
Vol. 343
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 342
Vol. 342
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 341
Vol. 341
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 340
Vol. 340
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 339
Vol. 339
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vols. 337-338
Vols. 337-338
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vol. 336
Vol. 336
Defect and Diffusion Forum
Vols. 334-335
Vols. 334-335
Defect and Diffusion Forum
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Vol. 333
Defect and Diffusion Forum Vol. 341
Paper Title Page
Abstract: An increasing amount of public interest in environmental monitoring programmes is being focused on the environmental impact of radiation arising from nuclear power operations and the corresponding detection of slight variations in the natural radiation background. The primary objective of individual monitoring for external radiation is to assess, and thus limit, radiation doses to individual workers. Supplementary objectives are to provide information about the trends of these doses and about the conditions in places of work and to give information in the event of accidental exposure. Depending on the kind of radiation hazard, the ICRP recommended maximum permissible dose (MPD) values. These are the maximum dose equivalent values, which are not expected to cause appreciable body injury to a person during his lifetime.
Thermoluminescent Dosimetry (TLD) has been developed during 1960-70 for various applications in medicine and industry. TLD, the most advanced and most intensively studied integrating dosimeter system, has now reached the stage at which it may replace or supplement film dosimetry. TLD systems are widely applied to environmental monitoring programmes near nuclear installations. TLD systems with high reproducibility in the milli roentgen dose range are required in order to measure exposures equal to that resulting from an exposure rate of 10μR h-1 during field periods of from several days up to a year. A brief list of applications specific to radiation oncology is given here. In radiation oncology dosimetric accuracy demanded is of the order of 2-5%. TLDs offer a clear solution since their precision meets this criteria.
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