PRICES include / exclude VAT
>ISO Standards>13>13.080>13.080.99>ISO 18589-7:2025 - Measurement of radioactivity in the environment — Soil — Part 7: In situ measurement of gamma-emitting radionuclides
immediate downloadReleased: 2025-12-12
ISO 18589-7:2025 - Measurement of radioactivity in the environment — Soil — Part 7: In situ measurement of gamma-emitting radionuclides

ISO 18589-7:2025

ISO 18589-7:2025 - Measurement of radioactivity in the environment — Soil — Part 7: In situ measurement of gamma-emitting radionuclides

Format
Availability
Price and currency
English PDF
Immediate download
Printable
272.16 USD
English Hardcopy
in stock
272.16 USD
French PDF
Immediate download
Printable
272.16 USD
French Hardcopy
in stock
272.16 USD
Standard´s number:ISO 18589-7:2025
Edition:2
Released:2025-12-12
Pages (English):54
Pages (French):55
DESCRIPTION

ISO 18589-7:2025

This document specifies the identification of radionuclides and the measurement of their activity in soil using in situ gamma spectrometry with portable systems equipped with germanium or scintillation detectors.

This document is suitable to rapidly assess the activity of artificial and natural radionuclides deposited on or present in soil layers of large areas of a site under investigation.

This document can be used in connection with radionuclide measurements of soil samples in the laboratory (see ISO 18589-3) in the following cases:

     routine surveillance of the impact of radioactivity released from nuclear installations or of the evolution of radioactivity in the region;

     investigations of accident and incident situations;

     planning and surveillance of remedial action;

     decommissioning of installations or the clearance of materials.

It can also be used for the identification of airborne artificial radionuclides, when assessing the exposure levels inside buildings or during waste disposal operations.

Following a nuclear accident, in situ gamma spectrometry is a powerful method for rapid evaluation of the gamma activity deposited onto the soil surface as well as the surficial contamination of flat objects.

NOTE            The method described in this document is not suitable when the spatial distribution of the radionuclides in the environment is not precisely known (influence quantities, unknown distribution in soil) or in situations with very high photon flux. However, the use of small volume detectors with suitable electronics allows measurements to be performed under high photon flux.