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Journal article

Absorbed Dose Distributions in Small Copper Wire Insulation due to Multiple-Sided Irradiations by 0.4 MeV Electrons

From

Risø National Laboratory for Sustainable Energy, Technical University of Denmark1

When scanned electron beams are used to crosslink polymeric insulation of wire and cable, an important goal is to achieve optimum uniformity of absorbed dose distributions. Accurate measurements of dose distributions in a plastic dosimeter simulating a typical insulating material (polyethylene) surrounding a copper wire core show that equal irradiations from as few as four sides give approximately isotropy and satisfactorily uniform energy depositions around the wire circumference.

Electron beams of 0.4 MeV maximum energy were used to irradiate wires having a copper core of 1.0 mm dia. and insulation thicknesses between 0.4 and 0.8 mm. The plastic dosimeter simulating polyethylene insulations was a thin radiochromic polyvinyl butyral film wrapped several times around the copper wire, such that when unwrapped and analyzed optically on a scanning microspectrophotometer, high-resolution radial and depth-dose profiles could be determined.

Language: English
Year: 1979
Pages: 181-186
ISSN: 01465724 , 2588803x , 18790895 and 0969806x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/0146-5724(79)90043-8
ORCIDs: Miller, Arne

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