Question regarding Actvity and conversion to Gray etc

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The discussion centers on calculating the activity of a sample of 239Pu, which is determined by multiplying the number of atoms (3x10^10) by the decay constant derived from its half-life. The calculated activity is 0.027 Bq, leading to an estimated daily source of 2332 Bq if ingested. To convert this activity into Gray, the energy of the emitted particles and attenuation factors must be considered, with a focus on the definition of Gray as joules per kilogram. The conversion involves calculating the energy from alpha emissions and applying the quality factor for alpha particles to derive the dose in Sieverts. The range of Pu-239 alpha particles in air and tissue is also noted, emphasizing the significance of these calculations in radiological health contexts.
|Fred
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Hi,

If I am not mistaken the activity of a radioactive isotope is equal to the number of atoms in the sample multiplied by the decay constant of the material. The halflife and decay constant are related by:decay constant = (ln(2))/halflife.

Would you be kind enough to check the math

If I take a sample of 3x10^10 atoms of 239Pu
ln(2)/24000 = 2.888*10^-5 yr^-1 = 9.152*10^-13 sec^-1

The activity of my sample off 3x10^10 atoms of 239Pu would be

300 * (9.152*10^-13 sec^-1) = 2.391*10^-2 atoms/sec = 0.027 Bq.

***********

Assuming this sample is ingested , this particle has an activity of 0.027Bq
So If I'm not mistaken it means that the sample will be the source 60x60x24x0.027 = 2332Bq in one day pretty much everyday if the particle is not removed.

From there how do we convert that into Gray


thank you
 
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To convert disintegrations (rate) to dose (rate), one needs to know the energy of the emission, and then attenuation factors. I'll see if I can dig up some formulae.

If anyone is interested, there is a text called Radiological Health Handbook. I have the 1970 edition.

Here's something that may help. I haven't had time to review it though.

www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/docs/wipp/08-0442 attach 3.pdf

Interestingly - http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/servlets/purl/4708654-0dwoYD/4708654.pdf (use Save Target As) 25 MB.
 
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|Fred said:
If I take a sample of 3x10^10 atoms of 239Pu
ln(2)/24000 = 2.888*10^-5 yr^-1 = 9.152*10^-13 sec^-1

The activity of my sample off 3x10^10 atoms of 239Pu would be

300 * (9.152*10^-13 sec^-1) = 2.391*10^-2 atoms/sec = 0.027 Bq.

***********

Assuming this sample is ingested , this particle has an activity of 0.027Bq
So If I'm not mistaken it means that the sample will be the source 60x60x24x0.027 = 2332Bq in one day pretty much everyday if the particle is not removed.

From there how do we convert that into Gray
I think we have to go back to the definition of a Gray: 1 Gray = 1 joule per kilogram, and Sieverts = Q x Grays. For the dose we should use H = DQ Sieverts, where Q is the quality factor of alphas; Q = 20. See page 10-6 in

http://www.epa.gov/oswer/riskassessment/ragsa/pdf/ch10.pdf

Then joules is alpha energy in eV times the total decays in Coulombs, because joules = volts x Coulombs. So for your number (2332 Bq) we have

J= (5.24 x 106 eV) x (2332 Bq) x (1.6 x 10-19 Coulombs/Bq) = 2 x 10-9 joules.

So we have H = QJ/M = 20 x 2 x 10-9 joules/M = 4 x 10-8 joules/M Sieverts,

where M is the mass absorbing the alphas in kilograms.

===========

The range of a Pu-239 alpha is ≈ 4 cm in air = ≈ 0.004 cm in tissue.

Bob S
 
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