0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
These things won't be much better than a raincoat at blocking high energy gamma radiation. Notice the reference to shielding "low energy gamma radiation", in other words, X-rays.
For protection while in the presence of a gamma source, you need a heavy lead suit, like the vest your dentist might put over you while x-raying your teeth. Depending on the power of the source and duration of exposure, you might need a 50kg, 100kg or 1000kg suit. Obviously, there's not much you can do in a lead suit, so they really need suicide volunteers for the most dangerous jobs. The suits that are light enough to work in can only assure that your exposure ends when are away from the source and out of the decontaminated suit. They can be reused if they pass some tests after each use.
Most of those vests that dentists use are made from a denser material than lead, most use depleted Uranium as the blocking material. Good for short exposure to low energy Xrays, but the worst thing to wear when exposed to high energy neutrons. Best thing is distance and a lot of iron shielding between you and it, not exactly a wearable item.
Quote from: SeanB on 18/03/2011 19:12:39Most of those vests that dentists use are made from a denser material than lead, most use depleted Uranium as the blocking material. Good for short exposure to low energy Xrays, but the worst thing to wear when exposed to high energy neutrons. Best thing is distance and a lot of iron shielding between you and it, not exactly a wearable item.Sean, why is iron better than anything else? As I understand it, it's simply a question of mass.
Quote from: Geezer on 18/03/2011 19:27:33Quote from: SeanB on 18/03/2011 19:12:39Most of those vests that dentists use are made from a denser material than lead, most use depleted Uranium as the blocking material. Good for short exposure to low energy Xrays, but the worst thing to wear when exposed to high energy neutrons. Best thing is distance and a lot of iron shielding between you and it, not exactly a wearable item.Sean, why is iron better than anything else? As I understand it, it's simply a question of mass.Neutron shielding works by capturing neutrons into nuclei. This changes the isotope mix of the material, and you don't want to make your shielding material dangerously radioactive by creating a bunch of nuclei of a short half-life unstable isotope.Iron is about 92% 56Fe, 6% 54Fe, and 2% 57Fe, which are all stable. So if you capture a neutron, you have a 92% chance of creating a 57Fe nucleus, which is stable, a 6% chance of creating a 55Fe nucleus, which has a half-life of 2.7 years, and a 2% chance of creating a 58Fe nucleus, which is also stable.Comparing to lead, the composition is 52% 208Pb. 209Pb has a half life of about 3 hours, so using lead for neutron shielding will convert the neutron radiation to another sort of radiation with fairly high efficiency.