Shielding Fundamentals - Radiation's Kryptonite
- 📌 ALARA Principle: Minimize exposure (Time ↓, Distance ↑, Shielding ↑).
- Radiation Types & Shielding Needs:
- α (Alpha): Paper, skin.
- β (Beta): Plastic, Aluminium.
- X-rays & γ-rays: Lead (Pb), Concrete (high Z, high density).
- Neutrons: Water, Paraffin, Concrete (Hydrogen-rich).
- Attenuation: Intensity reduction ($I = I_0 e^{-\mu x}$); $\mu$ = linear attenuation coefficient.
- Half-Value Layer (HVL): Thickness reducing intensity by 50%. $HVL = 0.693/\mu$.
- Tenth-Value Layer (TVL): Thickness reducing intensity by 90%. $TVL = \ln(10)/\mu \approx 3.32 \times HVL$.
⭐ The TVL being approximately 3.32 times the HVL is a key calculation shortcut.
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Shielding Metrics - Numbers Game
- HVL (Half-Value Layer): Material thickness reducing radiation intensity by 50%. $HVL = 0.693 / \mu$.
- TVL (Tenth-Value Layer): Material thickness reducing radiation intensity by 90% (to 1/10th). $TVL = 2.303 / \mu$.
- $1 \text{ TVL} \approx 3.32 \text{ HVLs}$.
- Linear Attenuation Coefficient ($\mu$): Probability of photon interaction per unit length (cm⁻¹). Depends on energy, Z, density.
- Mass Attenuation Coefficient ($\mu/\rho$): $\mu$ normalized for density (cm²/g). More fundamental.
- Workload (W): Measure of radiation output (e.g., mA-min/week).
- Use Factor (U): Fraction of time beam is directed at a barrier.
- Occupancy Factor (T): Fraction of time an area is occupied.

⭐ For diagnostic X-rays, lead (Pb) HVL is typically < 0.5 mm at 80 kVp, while for Co-60 gamma rays (~1.25 MeV), lead HVL is ~1.25 cm.
Barrier Design - Building Fort Knox
- Goal: ALARA; keep exposures below weekly dose limits for staff & public.
- Barrier Types:
- Primary: Intercepts useful beam. Max shielding needed.
- Secondary: Shields scatter & leakage. Leakage: <1 mGy/hr @ 1m from housing.
- Shielding Factors ($B = P d^2 / (WUT)$):
- $P$: Permissible dose/wk (Controlled: 0.1 mSv; Uncontrolled: 0.02 mSv).
- $d$: Distance (source to occupied point).
- $W$: Workload (mA-min/wk), total tube output.
- $U$: Use factor (beam fraction at barrier).
- $T$: Occupancy factor (time area is occupied).
- Attenuation:
- HVL: Thickness reducing intensity by 50%.
- TVL: Thickness reducing intensity by 90% ($1 \text{ TVL} \approx 3.3 \text{ HVL}$).
⭐ Shielding calculations must account for workload (W), use (U), and occupancy (T) factors to avoid over/under-shielding.

Materials & Regs - Lead & Law
- Shielding Materials:
- High Z (e.g., Lead, Pb Z=82): Maximize photoelectric absorption.
- Cost-effective, widely used.
- Alternatives: Concrete, steel, barium plaster (Pb-equivalents).
- Half Value Layer (HVL): Thickness halving radiation intensity.
- Tenth Value Layer (TVL): Thickness reducing intensity by 90%.
- $TVL \approx 3.32 \times HVL$.
- High Z (e.g., Lead, Pb Z=82): Maximize photoelectric absorption.
- Regulations (AERB - India):
- Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB): National regulatory body.
- Key Code: AERB/SC/MED-2 (Medical Diagnostic X-Ray Safety).
- Annual Dose Limits:
- Occupational: 20 mSv (avg/5 yrs), max 30 mSv/yr.
- Public: 1 mSv.
- Area Classification:
- Controlled Area: Potential > 6 mSv/yr.
- Supervised Area: Potential > 1 mSv/yr.
- 📌 ALARA: As Low As Reasonably Achievable.
⭐ AERB mandates type approval for X-ray equipment and regular Quality Assurance (QA).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- HVL and TVL are fundamental for shielding thickness; 1 TVL ≈ 3.3 HVL.
- Inverse Square Law (intensity ∝ 1/distance²) is critical for distance protection.
- Shielding design considers Workload (W), Use Factor (U), and Occupancy Factor (T).
- Primary barriers attenuate the direct beam; secondary barriers for scatter and leakage.
- Dose limits are stricter for uncontrolled areas (public) than controlled areas.
- Lead (Pb) and concrete are common materials, chosen based on radiation energy.
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