OFR-105-78 Personal Alpha Alarm

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Donald B. Lindsay
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
86
File Size:
27483 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

A new concept was proposed for a personal warning device for use by miners who may be exposed to health hazards from inhalation of alpha-emitting radionuclides, especially radon-222 and its short-lived daughters. Two successive prototype models of the proposed instrument were designed, fabricated and tested. The Personal Alpha Alarm, in its final form, weighs less than 90 g (3 ounces), and can easily he mounted on a miner's safety cap. It is powered r, by electricity drawn from the cap-lamp battery, and consumes less than 100 n A at 4VDC. It is entirely passive and has no moving parts. Alpha-radiation originating in the air around it is detected by a 5 cm2-area semiconductor-type sensor that was developed especially for this purpose. The presence of alpharadiation in the air is communicated to the wearer by means of a small flashing light-a light-emitting diode-clipped to the brim of the safety cap. When the intensity of alpha-radiation exceeds a predetermined threshold, the flashing mode changes to a continuous illumination, thus providing an alarm signal to the wearer. Because the detector senses all alpha-emitters in the air, including 222Rn, it is not able to measure Working Levels accurately. For its intended purpose, however, which is to give a timely warning of excessive levels (several times the normal control level) of radon and/or radon daughters in an individual's air environment, the Personal Alpha Alarm is expected to be a useful instrument.
Citation

APA: Donald B. Lindsay  (1978)  OFR-105-78 Personal Alpha Alarm

MLA: Donald B. Lindsay OFR-105-78 Personal Alpha Alarm. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1978.

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