Comparisons of calorimetric and ionometric measurements in graphite irradiated with electrons from 15 to 50 MeV
- 1 September 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Medical Physics
- Vol. 3 (5) , 294-301
- https://doi.org/10.1118/1.594290
Abstract
Extensive experimental comparisons of calorimetric and ionometric measurements have been made that cover a broader range of electrons energies and depths in graphite than previously reported. Electron beams of 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, and 50 MeV were used. Calorimetric absorbed-dose measurements and ionometric specific-charge measurements in air were compared in graphite at depths from 1 to 51 g/cm2. The medium was irradiated with uncollimated electron beams produced by scattering after passing through a 0.1-g/cm2 aluminium vacuum window, various thicknesses of lead foils, and air. The variation in the quotient of the two measurements was studied as a function of lead-foil thickness, depth in the medium, beam energy, foil-to-detector distance, and off-axis distance. These studies permitted the measurements to be corrected and compared with theoretical calculations that assume a broad medium irradiated with broad, parallel, monoenergetic electron beams. The overall experimental uncertainty is estimated to be 1%. The results are generally in good agreement with theoretical and experimental results of other investigators. The calorimeter received close to 1 Mrad during preliminary measurements and from 1 to 2 Mrad during the measurements reported. The results showed no detectable heat defect in graphite after prolonged periods of exposing the calorimeter to air at atmospheric pressure.Keywords
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