International intercomparison of Radon 222 activity concentration calibration facilities

  • Melinda Ronca-Battista Tribal Air Monitoring Support Center
  • Pam Warkentin Canadian National Radon Proficiency Program, Winnipeg, Canada
  • Jens Jensen Swedish Radiation Safety Authority, Stockholm, Sweden
  • José-Luis Gutiérrez Villanueva Radonova Laboratories AB, Uppsala, Sweden
Keywords: radon, radon chamber, radon reference levels, proficiency test, radon calibration, interlaboratory comparison test

Abstract

The Coalition of International Radon Associations (COIRA) organised an inter-comparison of Rn-222 (radon) activity concentrations reported by calibration laboratories. A set of three AlphaGUARDs were used as transfer reference instruments against which to compare reported Rn-222 activity concentrations. Rn-222 activity concentration calibration facilities (sometimes termed chambers) from seven countries (Australia, US, Czech Republic, Spain, England, Sweden, Canada), and three continents participated in this project. The objective of the study was to provide information useful to calibration chamber operators and public health officials in the improvement of measurement and control systems, the maintenance of performance standards for measurements, and regulatory requirements for calibrations. This work builds upon and expands previous interlaboratory comparisons and provides data for estimating and using calibration uncertainty values as part of overall field error estimates and limits. A simple proportional difference between laboratories is presented here, calculated as the average for N hours of each hour’s difference between the laboratory’s concentration and the average of the three reference instruments. This percent difference ranged from less than 0.5% to just less than 8%. This work demonstrates that the ANSI/AARST standards limit of 8% for the estimated unexpanded (one sigma) individual calibration estimated uncertainty for continuous radon monitor calibration facilities in the US is achievable. However, given the few standards regarding calibration of Rn-222 activity concentration measurement instruments that themselves are often used to calibrate secondary and tertiary Rn-222 calibration facilities, there is a great need for continued interlaboratory comparisons to harmonise and document the calibration of Rn-222 activity concentrations.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References


1.
National Radon Proficiency Program, American Association of Radon Scientists and Technologists. Certification of measurement providers. 2023. Available from: https://nrpp.info/devices/approved-devices/ [9 October 2024].


2.
Performance specifications for instrumentation systems designed to measure radon gas in air. ANSI/AARST MS-PC 2015. 2015. Available from: https://standards.aarst.org/MS-PC-2015/ [9 October 2024].


3.
Radon Measurement Systems Quality Assurance. ANSI/AARST MS-QA-2019. Available from: https://webstore.ansi.org/standards/aarst/ansiaarstmsqa2019 [9 October 2024].


4.
Ronca-Battista M, Budd G, McLemore S. Uncertainty of 222Rn concentrations in the USEPA radiation and indoor environments national laboratory exposure chamber. Health Phys 2013; 104(2): 168–78. doi: 10.1097/HP.0b013e3182712e5a


5.
Beck TR, Antohe A, Cardellini F, Cucoş A, Fialova E, Grossi C, et al. The metrological traceability, performance and precision of European radon calibration facilities. Int J Environ Res Public Health 2021; 18(22): 12150. doi: 10.3390/ijerph182212150


6.
R Core Team. R: a language and environment for statistical computing. Vienna, Austria: R Foundation for Statistical Computing; 2021. Available from: https://www.R-project.org/ [9 October 2024].


7.
Lin CF, Wang JJ, Lin SJ, Lin CK. Performance comparison of electronic radon monitors. Appl Radiat Isot 2013; 81: 238–41. doi: 10.1016/j.apradiso.2013.03.024


8.
Roessler F, Buerkin W, Villert J. AlphaGUARD, the new reference for continuous radon monitoring in air, soil, gas, water and material. In Wilhelm C, ed. Radiation protection for humans and environment 50 years competence in the professional association. Germany; 2016, p. 468. Available from: https://inis.iaea.org/search/citationdownload.aspx [9 October 2024].


9.
Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS). BFS, Ionizing Radiation, Radon Calibration Laboratory. Available from: https://www.bfs.de/EN/topics/ion/environment/laboratories/radon/radon.html [9 October 2024].

10.
Bowser Morner International Radon Calibration Services. Radon reference laboratory services include: Calibration of continuous radon monitors 2023. Available from: https://www.bowser-morner.com/radon-reference-lab [9 October 2024].

11.
Tribal Air Monitoring Support Center. TEMS Services: Indoor Air Quality. Las Vegas, NV. Available from: https://www7.nau.edu/itep/main/tams/Services/EqpLoans [9 October 2024].
Published
2024-11-12
How to Cite
Ronca-Battista M., Warkentin P., Jensen J., & Gutiérrez Villanueva J.-L. (2024). International intercomparison of Radon 222 activity concentration calibration facilities. Journal of the European Radon Association, 5. https://doi.org/10.35815/radon.v5.10607
Section
Original Research Articles