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Radiation Protection Dosimetry Advance Access originally published online on June 7, 2005
Radiation Protection Dosimetry 2005 117(4):408-413; doi:10.1093/rpd/nci307
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Anomalous indoor radon concentration in a dwelling in Qatif city, Saudi Arabia

M. I. Al-Jarallah* and Fazal-ur-Rehman

Department of Physics, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran 31261, Saudi Arabia

* Corresponding author: mibrahim{at}kfupm.edu.sa

Received September 8, 2004, amended May 7, 2005, accepted May 16, 2005

An indoor radon survey was carried out recently in nine cities of Saudi Arabia using nuclear track detectors (NTD)-based passive radon detectors. The survey included Qatif City in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, where 225 detectors were collected back successfully. It was found that the average indoor radon concentration in the dwellings was 22 ± 15 Bq m–3. However, one of the dwellings showed an anomalous radon concentration of 535 ± 23 Bq m–3. This finding led to a detailed investigation of this dwelling using active and passive techniques. In the active technique, an AlphaGUARD 2000 PRQ radon gas analyser was used. In the passive technique, CR-39 based passive radon detectors were used in all the rooms of the dwelling. Radon exhalation from the wall and the floor was also measured using the can technique. The active measurement confirms the passive one. Before placing the passive radon detectors in all the rooms of the two-storey building, the inhabitant was advised to ventilate his house regularly. The radon concentration in the different rooms was found to vary from 124 to 302 Bq m–3. Radon exhalation from the floor and the wall of the room with the anomalous radon concentration was found to vary from 0.5 to 0.8 Bq m–2 h–1. These low radon exhalation rates suggest that the anomalous radon concentration is most probably due to underground radon diffusion into the dwelling through cracks and joints in the concrete floor.


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