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The specific activity of air in the large open room housing the 800-MeV proton synchrotron of the ISIS Spallation Neutron and Muon Source has been measured. Air from several positions within the ISIS synchrotron room was sucked through a long flexible tube, and run past a shielded HPGe gamma-ray detector outside the synchrotron room. In spite of an expectation that 13N should be the largest component of the overall activity in the air, the results of the measurements are consistent with the presence in the air of 11C and 41Ar only, and suggest that the activity in the air is mostly created not in the synchrotron room itself but in the massive shielding monoliths around the neutron-producing targets, monoliths through which ventilation air is drawn into the synchrotron room. Typical specific activities of 11C and 41Ar in the air in the synchrotron room are ∼0.10 and ∼0.03 Bq cm-3 respectively, the upper limit for 13N being at most ∼0.01 Bq cm-3.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.apradiso.2022.110139

Type

Journal article

Journal

Appl Radiat Isot

Publication Date

04/2022

Volume

182

Keywords

Air activation, Calculations, Measurements, Neutrons, Proton beams, Spallation, Targets, Air Pollutants, Radioactive, Argon, Carbon Isotopes, Nitrogen Radioisotopes, Protons, Synchrotrons