Mahmoud Karem A, Tashlykov Oleg L, Mhareb M H A, Almuqrin Aljawhara H, Alajerami Y S M, Sayyed M I
Department of Nuclear Power Plants and Renewable Energy, Ural Power Institute, Ural Federal University, Yekaterinburg, Russia; Nuclear Materials Authority, El Maadi, P. O. Box 530, Cairo, Egypt.
Department of Nuclear Power Plants and Renewable Energy, Ural Power Institute, Ural Federal University, Yekaterinburg, Russia.
Appl Radiat Isot. 2021 Jul;173:109720. doi: 10.1016/j.apradiso.2021.109720. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
The present work novelty pointed to fabricate new clay bricks doped with heavy minerals to be used in the building materials as a candidate for radiation shielding. The bricks were manufactured as (y)+ (1-y), where y = 0, 0.1, 0.2 and 0.3 fractional weight. The prepared bricks' chemical composition and density were introduced to the MCNP-5 code to assess the prepared bricks' protection capacity. The simulated linear attenuation coefficient (LAC) was confirmed by comparing the simulated results with those calculated by the Phy-X/PSD program. We found that the simulated and calculated LAC were close together. The diff (%) between the MCNP-5 and Phy-X/PSD is in the range ±2% for all the fabricated bricks. The maximum LAC values occurred at 0.015 MeV, varied between 21.540 and 39.553 cm for bricks N0 and N30. The lowest LAC achieved at 15 MeV varied between 0.068 and 0.090 cm. Bricks without heavy mineral addition have the lowest LAC values at all energies, ranging from 21.540 cm to 0.068 cm, while bricks with 30 wt% heavy minerals have the highest LAC. The half-value layer (HVL) values decreased gradually with increasing the mineral ratio in the fabricated bricks. The thinner brick HVL achieved for the sample N 30 with 30 wt % heavy mineral, growing from 0.017 to 7.675 cm. The effective atomic number (Z) was reported, and we found that the minimum Z values equal to 14.006, 14.865, 15.705, and 16.394 for bricks N 0, N 10, N 20, N 30, respectively.