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AbstractAbstract
[en] A method for trapping radioactive xenon waste from nuclear medical departments has been investigated. Adsorption of xenon acivitaded charcoal was found to be an efficient trapping method. A large gain in capacity was found when the trap was refrigerated, and permitted a large number of patient investigations before break-through of xenon occurred. By heating charcoal traps to 250-350 degrees C, adsorbed xenon gas is freed and is thus made available for re-use. A technique for room-air monitoring of xenon-leakage from patient investigations is described, where the room-air is continously pumped through a small charcoal filter, mounted close to a detector. The low gammaenergy of Xe-133, 81 keV, introduces problems for in vivo measurements due to the small differences in the energies of the primary and Compton-scattered photons. Influence of scatter and of hemispheric cross-talk was studied for cerebral blood-flow measurements. It was shown that substantial artefacts are introduced in the calculation of regional gray matter flow. The applicability of the xenon-washout technique for liver blood-flow measurements in rat was investigated. (author)
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Source
Nov 1981; 132 p; LUMEDW/MERI--1014/1-46/(1981); These (D. Phil.).
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Thesis/Dissertation
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ADSORBENTS, BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, BETA-MINUS DECAY RADIOISOTOPES, CARBON, DAYS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES, ELEMENTS, EVEN-ODD NUCLEI, INTERMEDIATE MASS NUCLEI, ISOMERIC TRANSITION ISOTOPES, ISOTOPES, LABORATORY EQUIPMENT, MEDICINE, MONITORING, NONMETALS, NUCLEI, RADIOISOTOPES, SAMPLERS, XENON ISOTOPES
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