Abstract
Abstract
For planned occupational exposure situations, the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) publication 118 recommends an equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye of 20 mSv yr−1 averaged over 5 yr with no single year exceeding 50 mSv. Regulatory authorities of various jurisdictions worldwide followed some or all, of the ICRP recommendations and implemented reduced occupational lens of eye dose limits in their legislation. As compliance with the eye-lens dose limit will be based on the summation of doses received from all types of radiation, applicable to a variety of workplaces, the contribution of neutrons to eye lens dose will be important where it contributes a significant fraction of the total dose to the eye lens. This work presents and discusses computed personal absorbed dose (D
lens/Φ), and personal dose equivalent (H
p(3)/Φ) as well as a newly proposed relative biological effectiveness (RBE)-weighted absorbed dose (RBE × D
lens/Φ) conversion coefficients for the lens of the eye for neutron exposure at incident energies from thermal to ∼20 MeV. The D
lens/Φ coefficients were obtained from a simulation model developed for this study that contains the stylised eye model embedded in the adult UF-ORNL mathematical phantom. The modelling techniques used in these simulations were also used to calculate H
p(3)/Φ for the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU) slab and cylinder phantoms. All simulations carried out for this study utilised the Monte Carlo N-Particle (MCNP) series of codes. The results are compared with the related published data. The issue of compliance with the current equivalent dose limit for the lens of the eye is addressed from a neutron perspective considering the recent proposed redefinition of the operational quantities for external radiation exposure in ICRU report 95. The use of a radiation weighted absorbed dose (RBE × D
lens, in Gy) is proposed for the tissue reactions in the eye-lens for neutron radiation as per the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements report 180, and in line with the recent review and revision of the System of Radiological Protection To Keeping the ICRP Recommendations Fit for Purpose, which states that RBE weighted dose should be used for high-Linear energy transfer (LET) radiations such as neutrons. This confirms the earlier statement in ICRP publication 92, paragraph 297 and reiterated in the Executive summary, paragraph (q) of ICRP publication 118. The proposed approach would provide an operational quantity consistent with the units of the new eye-lens dose limits without being overly conservative.
Funder
Federal Nuclear Sciences and Technology Work Plan - Canada
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Waste Management and Disposal,General Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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