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URANIUM in SOIL and GAMMA DOSE RATE AS PROXIES for the INDOOR RADON RISK: SITUATION in BELGIUM

TitleURANIUM in SOIL and GAMMA DOSE RATE AS PROXIES for the INDOOR RADON RISK: SITUATION in BELGIUM
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsTondeur, F., Cinelli Giorgia, and Dehandschutter B.
JournalRadiation Protection Dosimetry
Volume177
Pagination176-180
Keywordsair pollutant, Air Pollutants, Air pollution, analysis, Belgium, gamma radiation, Gamma rays, Indoor, indoor air pollution, procedures, Radiation Dosage, radiation dose, radiation monitoring, Radioactive, Radon, soil pollutant, Soil Pollutants
Abstract

Radon risk maps are usually based either on indoor radon data, or on measurements of soil gas radon and soil permeability. If these data are not available or not sufficient, it was suggested that other data could be used as an approximate substitute (a proxy) to the missing information, like the concentration of 238U or 226Ra in soils or the terrestrial gamma dose rate (TGDR). We examine here the correlation between airborne measurements of soil U and indoor radon, and between airborne U and TGDR, and their link with affected/unaffected areas. No clear correlation is found between airborne U and affected areas, as strongly affected areas are not characterised by a higher U level. Only the moderately affected area of Condroz can be connected to a higher U level, related to a few U anomalies. TGDR shows a rather good correlation with airborne U, but its relation with radon risk is less clear. Soil uranium and TGDR may help to screen out areas with very low U and very low TGDR, which have a low indoor radon risk, but they cannot be considered as good proxies for predicting radon-affected areas in Belgium. © 2017 The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85049245632&doi=10.1093%2frpd%2fncx146&partnerID=40&md5=4b470b04a4b8016fc02543ef38ae8a29
DOI10.1093/rpd/ncx146
Citation KeyTondeur2017176