ABSTRACT
This paper reports the development of dosimeters based on plastic scintillating fibers imaged by a charge-coupled device camera, and their performance evaluation through irradiations with the electron Flash research accelerator located at the Centro Pisano Flash Radiotherapy. The dosimeter prototypes were composed of a piece of plastic scintillating fiber optically coupled to a clear optical fiber which transported the scintillation signal to the readout systems (an imaging system and a photodiode). The following properties were tested: linearity, capability to reconstruct the percentage depth dose curve in solid water and to sample in time the single beam pulse. The stem effect contribution was evaluated with three methods, and a proof-of-concept one-dimensional array was developed and tested for online beam profiling. Results show linearity up to 10 Gy per pulse, and good capability to reconstruct both the timing and spatial profiles of the beam, thus suggesting that plastic scintillating fibers may be good candidates for low-energy electron Flash dosimetry.
Subject(s)
Electrons , Plastics , Radiation Dosimeters , Radiotherapy Dosage , Scintillation Counting , Electrons/therapeutic use , Scintillation Counting/instrumentation , Radiometry/instrumentationABSTRACT
We report the results obtained in 1992 concerning the determination of blood lead levels (PbB) in 1321 subjects of the general population living in ten villages/towns of the Florence district characterised by the presence of artistic ceramic factories. We reported also the PbB values found in 2330 adults, 280 children, 39 pregnant women and their correspondent umbilical cords, who were examined during the second biological monitoring campaign against the risk of lead intoxication according to the DPR 496/82. Median PbB values were 92.5 micrograms/l (range 15-520 micrograms/l) for males and 62.5 micrograms/l (range 11-343 micrograms/l) for females. The lower PbB median values were found in the district of Livorno (76.25 micrograms/l and 48.25 micrograms/l in males and females, respectively) and Arezzo (80.5 micrograms/l and 52 micrograms/l in males and females, respectively). In comparison with the results obtained for the general Italian population during the previous biological monitoring campaign carried out in 1985-86 we observed PbB median values about 40% lower for both males and females and PbB median values about 55% lower for children. A significant statistic correlation (r = 0.53) was found between PbB of pregnant women and their umbilical cords.