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An Electret Passive Environmental 222Rn Monitor Based on Ionization Measurement
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1988
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringMeasurementEducationElectret Surface PotentialInstrumentation EngineeringRelative HumidityChemical EngineeringAnalytical InstrumentationCalibrationSurface PotentialAnalytical ChemistryInstrumentationIon EmissionElectrical EngineeringRadiation DetectionPhysicsCosmic RayIonization MeasurementInstrument ScienceElectrophysiologyElectronic InstrumentationElectrical Insulation
The electret passive environmental 222Rn monitor (E-PERM) is an extension of electret dosimeters used for measurement of x and gamma radiation. An E-PERM consists of a small cup or canister, having an electret at the bottom, and a filtered inlet at the top. The 222Rn gas entering through the filter and the decay products formed inside the cup generate ions which are collected by the electret. The reduction of charge (or surface potential) on the electret is a measure of time integrated 222Rn exposure. An E-PERM of 220-mL volume with an electret of 0.23 cm thickness gave a surface potential drop of 2.5 V for 37 Bq m-3 d (1 pCi L-1 d). The electret voltage was measured with a specially built surface potential voltmeter. This sensitivity was found adequate for a 1-wk measurement of 222Rn in homes. For longer term measurements, an E-PERM of 40-mL volume and an electret of 51-micron thickness was developed which gave a surface potential drop of 2.6 V for 37 Bq m-3 y (1 pCi L-1 y). Other combinations of chamber volume and electret thicknesses gave responses between these two values. The surface potential of electrets made from Teflon FEP were shown to stay stable even under extreme conditions of relative humidity. The ion collection process in E-PERMs was also shown to be independent of humidity down to an electret surface potential of 100 V.