The invention involves a flexible radiation shielding material made up of elastic, radiation shielding, and shape retentive elements that in use has the ability to be readily formed into a conformal shape and retain that shape.
Currently radiation shielding articles used for high energy ionizing radiation contain high atomic number absorptive elements for instance metals like lead, barium, tungsten and others. This construction normally makes these articles heavy. Shielding articles are normally strategically held in place to maximize shielding efficiency by some external means. In the case of fixed absorbers used to construct radiation proof rooms, the absorptive materials are held in place by the wall, ceiling and floor structures. In the case of mobile radiation absorbers used in medical imaging and treatment, permanent wheels and or clamps hold them into the desired positions. In the cases where flexible absorber blankets or shaped articles are for use in nuclear power or nuclear propulsion generation facilities, or for spent nuclear waste treatment or storage facilities, it is common practice to drape or wrap blankets around radioactive articles to shield them, or to drape or wrap blankets over special supportive racks designed to facilitate rapid installation of the shields and or to carry the weight of the shields. Grommets are also commonly used to secure these installations by using cumbersome supplemental tie cords either to the article being shielded or to the specially constructed supplemental framework.
These limitations create significant additional effort to plan and install the radiation shielding materials. This results in inefficiency in the amount and weight of radiation shielding material required for a shielding task and in some cases results in higher than required radiation doses to be received by the installation personnel. In some cases the space available or geometry of installation does not allow for these options to be effectively utilized.
The shape retentive Flexible Radiation Absorber allows rapid installation of the minimum absorptive material as is required for the task as it is a squeeze or wrap in place option for a shape conformal absorber. The result is an efficient installation that uses a minimum of shielding material. Since the installation process is rapid, installer dose is minimize in circumstances where radioactive emissions cannot be stopped.
In the case of shielding required for medical, dental or animal procedures, the flexible but shape retentive absorber also carries significant benefits in keeping the shield in place during a given procedure.
Radiation absorbers are most often produced by forming a single structure through mixing ratios of radiation absorbing particles into a matrix of flexible less absorbent material. Often the particles are added in the form of powders. These powders may be lead, tungsten, barium, bismuth or other high atomic weight materials, or in the case of lower energy radiation or cost sensitive applications powders of iron, manganese, or zinc. Compounds and minerals containing these metals are also effective. The flexible material is either a thermoplastic, a thermo set or a cross likable polymer system such that after forming the mixture will retain the formed shape while alowing some mechanical distortion during application or use. Examples of polymer systems that meet these requirements include Nylons, polyethylenes, styrene block co polymers, paraffin waxes and others in thermoplastics and thermo sets, and polyurethanes, silicones, and others in cross-linkable polymer systems. This invention involves the incorporation of a deformable third element that wants formed will retain the deformed shape. This retained deformation of the third element allows the composite absorber article's flexible matrix to also retain said distortion. The method of manufacture is to place the shape retentive elements into the flexible matrix mixture during the initial porting, casting, injection, rolling or extrusion of the overall absorber shape. Alternately, the shape retentive element can be incorporated between two previously formed absorber shapes in a subsequent bonding operation.
The invention is used by placing the absorber in between the radiation source and the item to be shielded or protected. It may be also installed as part of the item to be shielded, or used as either a permanent or temporary cover for the item.