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. 2017 Jan;166(Pt 1):152-156.
doi: 10.1016/j.jenvrad.2016.01.018. Epub 2016 Mar 9.

A study on the correlation between soil radon potential and average indoor radon potential in Canadian cities

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A study on the correlation between soil radon potential and average indoor radon potential in Canadian cities

Jing Chen et al. J Environ Radioact. 2017 Jan.

Abstract

Exposure to indoor radon is identified as the main source of natural radiation exposure to the population. Since radon in homes originates mainly from soil gas radon, it is of public interest to study the correlation between radon in soil and radon indoors in different geographic locations. From 2007 to 2010, a total of 1070 sites were surveyed for soil gas radon and soil permeability. Among the sites surveyed, 430 sites were in 14 cities where indoor radon information is available from residential radon and thoron surveys conducted in recent years. It is observed that indoor radon potential (percentage of homes above 200 Bq m-3; range from 1.5% to 42%) correlates reasonably well with soil radon potential (SRP: an index proportional to soil gas radon concentration and soil permeability; average SRP ranged from 8 to 26). In five cities where in-situ soil permeability was measured at more than 20 sites, a strong correlation (R2 = 0.68 for linear regression and R2 = 0.81 for non-linear regression) was observed between indoor radon potential and soil radon potential. This summary report shows that soil gas radon measurement is a practical and useful predictor of indoor radon potential in a geographic area, and may be useful for making decisions around prioritizing activities to manage population exposure and future land-use planning.

Keywords: Indoor radon; Radon-222; Soil radon.

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