Pk. Hopke et al., ASSESSMENT OF THE EXPOSURE TO AND DOSE FROM RADON DECAY PRODUCTS IN NORMALLY OCCUPIED HOMES, Environmental science & technology, 29(5), 1995, pp. 1359-1364
The exposure to radon decay products has been assessed in seven homes
in the northeastem United States and southeastern Canada. In two of th
e houses, there was a single individual who smoked cigarettes. There w
ere a variety of heating and cooking appliances among these homes. The
se studies have provide 565 measurements of the activity-weighted size
distributions in these houses. The median value for the equilibrium f
actor was 0.408 as compared with the previously employed value of 0.50
. Using the recently adopted ICRP lung deposition and dosimetry model,
the hourly equivalent lung dose rate per unit, radon exposure was est
imated for each measured size distribution. The mean equivalent dose r
ate per unit of Rn-222 gas concentration was approximately 140 nSv h(-
1) Bq(-1) m(-3). It was found that the equivalent dose was strongly co
rrelated with the ratio of the decay product concentration to that of
radon, termed the equilibrium factor, F, with a correlation coefficien
t of 0.785. The correlation coefficient with the less than or equal to
2-nm size fraction (the ''unattached'' fraction) was 0.169, reflectin
g no significant relationship with the unattached fraction. Difference
s between houses with smokers present and absent were noted in the exp
osure conditions, but the resulting dose rate per unit of radon gas co
ncentration was essentially the same for the two groups. Expressed in
terms of ICRP's unit of effective dose for members of the public, the
mean dose rate conversion coefficient with respect to radon gas concen
tration found in this study was 3.8 nSv h(-1) Bq(-1) m(-3).