Estimating total effective dose equivalents from terrorist use of radiological dispersion devices

2007 
ABSTRACT Radiological dispersion devices (RDDs), commonly called “dirty bombs,” utilize a conventional explosive to deliberately disperse non-fissile material as an aerosol. This analysis models total effective dose equivalent (Sv) at various locations down-wind from the detonation site subsequent to terrorists detonating a 241Am, 137Cs, 60Co, 192Ir, or90Sr RDD. A source term for each isotope equaling 3.7 × 1013 Bq with an instantaneous release by either high explosives or low explosives at street level is assumed in order to evaluate total effective dose equivalent (TEDE) under various meteorological scenarios for intentional releases of non-fissile materials by terrorists. The inhalation pathway on average contributes most to TEDE. The inhalation pathway accounts for 96% (0.22 Sv) of the mean exposure estimate of 0.2321 Sv and occurs over an extremely short time frame (i.e., a few minutes). Ground shine, on average, contributes the second most to TEDE estimates accounting for approximately 4% (0.009 Sv)...
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