Cargando…

Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses

Distributions of "physical" and "biological" dose in different organs were calculated by coupling the FLUKA MC transport code with a geometrical human phantom inserted into a shielding box of variable shape, thickness and material. While the expression "physical dose" r...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ballarini, Francesca, Biaggi, Marco, Ferrari, Alfredo, Ottolenghi, Andrea, Pelliccioni, Maurizio, Scannicchio, Domenico
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1269/jrr.43.S99
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1405035
_version_ 1780923747927064576
author Ballarini, Francesca
Biaggi, Marco
Ferrari, Alfredo
Ottolenghi, Andrea
Pelliccioni, Maurizio
Scannicchio, Domenico
author_facet Ballarini, Francesca
Biaggi, Marco
Ferrari, Alfredo
Ottolenghi, Andrea
Pelliccioni, Maurizio
Scannicchio, Domenico
author_sort Ballarini, Francesca
collection CERN
description Distributions of "physical" and "biological" dose in different organs were calculated by coupling the FLUKA MC transport code with a geometrical human phantom inserted into a shielding box of variable shape, thickness and material. While the expression "physical dose" refers to the amount of deposited energy per unit mass (in Gy), "biological dose" was modelled with "Complex Lesions" (CL), clustered DNA strand breaks calculated in a previous work based on "event-by-event" track-structure simulations. The yields of complex lesions per cell and per unit dose were calculated for different radiation types and energies, and integrated into a version of FLUKA modified for this purpose, allowing us to estimate the effects of mixed fields. As an initial test simulation, the phantom was inserted into an aluminium parallelepiped and was isotropically irradiated with 500 MeV protons. Dose distributions were calculated for different values of the shielding thickness. The results were found to be organ-dependent. In most organs, with increasing shielding thickness the contribution of primary protons showed an initial flat region followed by a gradual decrease, whereas secondary particles showed an initial increase followed by a decrease at large thickness values. Secondary particles were found to provide a substantial contribution, especially to the biological dose. In particular, the decrease of their contribution occurred at larger depths than for primary protons. In addition, their contribution to biological dose was generally greater than that of primary protons.
id cern-1405035
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2002
record_format invenio
spelling cern-14050352019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1269/jrr.43.S99http://cds.cern.ch/record/1405035engBallarini, FrancescaBiaggi, MarcoFerrari, AlfredoOttolenghi, AndreaPelliccioni, MaurizioScannicchio, DomenicoModelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ DosesXXDistributions of "physical" and "biological" dose in different organs were calculated by coupling the FLUKA MC transport code with a geometrical human phantom inserted into a shielding box of variable shape, thickness and material. While the expression "physical dose" refers to the amount of deposited energy per unit mass (in Gy), "biological dose" was modelled with "Complex Lesions" (CL), clustered DNA strand breaks calculated in a previous work based on "event-by-event" track-structure simulations. The yields of complex lesions per cell and per unit dose were calculated for different radiation types and energies, and integrated into a version of FLUKA modified for this purpose, allowing us to estimate the effects of mixed fields. As an initial test simulation, the phantom was inserted into an aluminium parallelepiped and was isotropically irradiated with 500 MeV protons. Dose distributions were calculated for different values of the shielding thickness. The results were found to be organ-dependent. In most organs, with increasing shielding thickness the contribution of primary protons showed an initial flat region followed by a gradual decrease, whereas secondary particles showed an initial increase followed by a decrease at large thickness values. Secondary particles were found to provide a substantial contribution, especially to the biological dose. In particular, the decrease of their contribution occurred at larger depths than for primary protons. In addition, their contribution to biological dose was generally greater than that of primary protons.oai:cds.cern.ch:14050352002
spellingShingle XX
Ballarini, Francesca
Biaggi, Marco
Ferrari, Alfredo
Ottolenghi, Andrea
Pelliccioni, Maurizio
Scannicchio, Domenico
Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title_full Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title_fullStr Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title_full_unstemmed Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title_short Modelling the Influence of Shielding on Physical and Biological Organ Doses
title_sort modelling the influence of shielding on physical and biological organ doses
topic XX
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1269/jrr.43.S99
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1405035
work_keys_str_mv AT ballarinifrancesca modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses
AT biaggimarco modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses
AT ferrarialfredo modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses
AT ottolenghiandrea modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses
AT pelliccionimaurizio modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses
AT scannicchiodomenico modellingtheinfluenceofshieldingonphysicalandbiologicalorgandoses