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Direct Measurement of Tenth Value Layer Thicknesses for High Density Concretes with a Clinical Machine


S Tanny

S Tanny1*, D Harrell2 , M Chopra3 , J Noller2 , E Parsai1 , (1) University of Toledo Medical Center, Toledo, OH, (2) Shielding Construction Solutions, Inc, Tuscon, AZ, (3) Unviersal Minerals International, Inc, Tuscon, AZ

Presentations

SU-E-T-271 (Sunday, July 12, 2015) 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM Room: Exhibit Hall


Purpose: Use of high density concrete for radiation shielding is increasing, trading cost for space savings associated with the reduced tenth value layer (TVL). Precise information on the attenuation properties of high-density concretes is not readily present in the literature. A simple approximation is to scale the TVLs from NCRP 151 according relative increase in density. Here we present measured TVLs for heavy concretes of various densities using a built-in shielding test port.

Methods: Concrete densities tested range from 2.35 g cc⁻¹ (147 pcf) to 5.6 g cc⁻¹ (350 pcf). Measurements were taken using 6MV, 6FFF, and 10FFF on a Varian Truebeam linear accelerator. Field sizes of 4x4, 9x9 and 30x30 cm² were measured. A PTW 31013 Farmer chamber with a buildup cap was positioned 5.5 m from isocenter along the beam CAX. Concrete thicknesses were incremented in 5 cm intervals. Comparison TVLs were determined by scaling the NCRP 151 TVLs by the density ratio between the sample and standard density.

Results: The trend from the first to equilibrium TVL was an increase in thickness, compared with MC modeling, which predicted a decrease. Measured TVLs for 6 MV were reduced by as much as 8.9 cm for TVL₁ and 3.4 cm for TVLE compared to values scaled from NCRP 151. There was 1-3 mm difference in TVL between measurements done at 4x4 versus 30x30 cm². TVL₁ for 6FFF was 1.1 cm smaller than TVL₁ for 6MV, but TVLE was consistent to within 4 mm. TVL₁ and TVLE for 10FFF were reduced by 8.8 and 3.7 cm from scaled NCRP values, respectively.

Conclusions: We have measured the TVL thicknesses for various concretes. Simple density scaling of the values in NCRP 151 is a conservatively safe approximation, but actual TVLs may be reduced enough to eliminate some of the expense of installation.


Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: Daniel Harrell and Jim Noller are employees of Shielding Construction Solutions, Inc, the shielding construction company that built the vault discussed in this abstract. Manjit Chopra is an employee of Universal Minerals International, Inc, the company that provided the aggregates for the high density concretes used in the vault construction.


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