3 results match your criteria: "*National Calibration Reference Centre[Affiliation]"

Using tea as an artificial urine in a Canadian performance testing program for fission/activation products.

Health Phys

December 2014

*National Calibration Reference Centre, Radiation Protection Bureau, Health Canada, 775 Brookfield Road, P.L # 6302D, Ottawa, ON, Canada K1A 1C1.

In recent years, the National Calibration Reference Centre for Bioassay and In Vivo Monitoring (NCRC) at the Radiation Protection Bureau (RPB), Health Canada, has been conducting investigations with black tea to develop a matrix that can be used to replace urine in each of the following performance testing programs (PTP): (1) tritium, (2) carbon-14, (3) the DUAL (i.e., 3H/14C), and (4) fission/activation products (F/AP).

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(14)C is one of the radionuclides for which the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has developed performance testing programmes (PTPs). During the PTP exercises, clients receive samples of natural urine containing spiked radionuclides, for testing. In these programmes, urine has disadvantages.

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Lung counting is highly geometry dependent, especially at low photon energies. Monte Carlo simulations have been used to determine the magnitude of the errors obtained if it is assumed that the deposition is homogeneous, when in fact it is not. Simulation for a germanium lung counting system consisting of four, 70 mm x 30 mm diameter thick detectors have been performed for 70 deposition patterns.

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