Artificial neural network based isotopic analysis of airborne radioactivity measurement for radiological incident detection.

Journal: Applied radiation and isotopes : including data, instrumentation and methods for use in agriculture, industry and medicine
PMID:

Abstract

Responders need tools to rapidly detect and identify airborne alpha radioactivity during consequence management scenarios. Traditional continuous air monitoring systems used for this purpose compute the net counts in various energy windows to determine the presence of specified isotopes, such as U, Pu, and Am. These calculations rely on having a well-calibrated detector, which is challenging in low-background environments. Here, an alternative approach of using artificial neural networks to classify alpha spectra is presented. Two network architectures, fully connected and convolutional neural networks (CNNs), were trained to classify alpha spectra into four categories: background and background plus the three isotopes above. Sources were injected into measured background at various fractions of the derived response level (DRL) corresponding to early-phase Protective Action Guides. The convolutional network identifies all sources at 1% of the DRL with average probability of detection of 95% and false alarm probability of 1%. Further, the network identifies sources ranging between 0.25% and 1% of the DRL with higher than 80% probability of detection and lower than 7% false alarm probability. Most significantly, the network performance improves in low-count background conditions, increasing its minimum probability of detection to 93% and reducing the false alarm probabilities to lower than 0.25%. These results show that, once trained on datasets representing a range of detection scenarios, artificial neural networks can accurately identify alpha isotopes of interest without the need for detector calibration.

Authors

  • Surafel Woldegiorgis
    National Security Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA; University of Florida, Nuclear Engineering Program, USA. Electronic address: suwo8062@ufl.edu.
  • Thomas Grimes
    National Security Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA.
  • Cheslan Simpson
    National Security Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA.
  • Mitchell Myjak
    National Security Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, USA.