ISO 20956:2023

International Standard   Current Edition · Approved on 04 September 2023

Radiological protection — Low dose rate calibration of instruments for environmental and area monitoring

ISO 20956:2023 Files

English 14 Pages
Current Edition
BHD 46.5

ISO 20956:2023 Scope

This document specifies the calibration methods under laboratory conditions for dosemeters used for environmental and area monitoring of X and gamma-rays with respect to the operational quantities of the International Commission on Radiation Units and Measurements (ICRU)[1].

This document extends the dose rate range of ISO 4037-1 below 1,0 µSv·h−1. The specific uncertainty components are described for these calibration methods.

This document also specifies the method for routine checking of active area dosemeters. Routine checking is not a calibration, nor does it replace a calibration, but it is a simple and effective method to routinely verify that the performance of the equipment is continuously maintained after calibration and that the calibration is still valid.

This document does not deal with the special requirements for the calibration of spectrometer-based environmental dosemeters and passive dosemeters.

Best Sellers

GSO 150-2:2013
 
Gulf Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
BH GSO 150-2:2015
GSO 150-2:2013 
Bahraini Standard
Expiration dates for food products - Part 2 : Voluntary expiration dates
BH GSO 2055-1:2016
GSO 2055-1:2015 
Bahraini Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements
GSO 2055-1:2015
 
Gulf Technical Regulation
HALAL FOOD - Part 1 : General Requirements

Recently Published

ISO 22544:2025
 
International Standard
Laboratory design — Vocabulary
ISO 6670:2025
 
International Standard
Instant coffee — Sampling method for bulk units with liners
ISO/IEC TR 25219:2025
 
International Standard
Personal identification — ISO-compliant driving licence — Considerations for early adopters of ISO/IEC 18013-7
ISO 13315-5:2025
 
International Standard
Environmental management for concrete and concrete structures — Part 5: Execution of concrete structures