1 / 66

Radiographic darkroom

Radiographic darkroom. Dark room is a place where the necessary handling and processing of films can be carried out safely and efficiently, without the hazard of producing ‘film fog’ by accidental exposure to light or x-rays. Complete blackout is unnecessary.

debrao
Download Presentation

Radiographic darkroom

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Radiographic darkroom Dark room is a place where the necessary handling and processing of films can be carried out safely and efficiently, without the hazard of producing ‘film fog’ by accidental exposure to light or x-rays

  2. Complete blackout is unnecessary. • Safe illumination is required to facilitate darkroom procedures. • It must exclude all outside light and provide safe artificial light.

  3. Darkroom construction • Darkroom illumination • Darkroom equipments and its arrangement • Health and safety in processing area

  4. LOCATION • Centrally located • Serviced by hatches from the adjacent imaging room • Away from damp or hot areas • Accessible in terms of power and water supply • Adjoining viewing room • Completely light proof – no windows

  5. CENTRALLY LOCATED DARK ROOM

  6. PASS BOX Two light tight and x-ray proof doors Both cannot be opened at the same time.

  7. SIZE • Minimum floor area of 10 sq m • Ceiling height of 2.7 – 3.3 m • Size may be increased depending upon the department needs

  8. RADIATION PROTECTION • Walls adjacent to the radiographic rooms should be shielded with correct thickness of the lead- 1.6 – 2 mm lead or its equivalent • 25mm high quality barium plaster • 225 mm thick single brick wall • 150 mm thick concrete

  9. X-ray apparatus in the adjacent room should be properly placed – primary beam never be directed at the darkroom wall. • Radioactive materials should be stored as remotely as possible from the darkroom.

  10. FLOOR • Non-porous • Non-slippery • Chemical resistant • Stain proof • Durable & easy to maintain • Light coloured (low-light working conditions)

  11. Asphalt tiles • Porcelain tiles • Clay tiles • Plastic tiles may be used in the dry dark-rooms • Walls adjacent to the sinks and wet processing equipment should be protected to 1.3 m height

  12. WALLS & CEILING • Light in colour to reflect as much light as possible onto the working surface • A glossy cream or white paint(to obtain as much as reflected light as possible). • Good quality paint, non-flaking • Easy to wipe or clean • Covered with chemical resistant materials • Special paints, varnish, ceramic or plastic wall

  13. Ceiling should be at least 2.7 m high • Non-flaking emulsion paint • Any water pipes, electric cables or AC ducts to be enclosed above a false ceiling

  14. VENTILATION AND HEATING • Satisfactory working conditions for the staff • Adequate processing conditions • Efficient automatic processor performance • Adequate removal of stale humid air and supply of fresh air • Intake and extract fans can be used

  15. Relative humidity is maintained at around 40-60 % • Room temperature maintained between 18-20 degree celsius • A minimum of 5 - 10 air changes per hour • Minimum of 1000 cu.ft. airspace/person

  16. All of these conditions can be achieved by using a good air-conditioning system • Exhaust fan if used are provided with a cowl on the outside – light proof and protect against wind pressures

  17. TYPE OF ENTRANCE • Single door system • Double door system • Maze and Labyrinth • Revolving door system

  18. SINGLE DOOR ENTRANCE • Latch or lock from inside • Capable of releasing the lock from outside in case of emergency • Emergency exit • Ideally no one should work alone in a dark room

  19. DOUBLE DOOR ENTRANCE

  20. Double door plan with interlocked doors

  21. MAZE TYPE ENTRANCE M A Z E

  22. LABYRINTH TYPE ENTRANCE Light is reflected at least 3 times. Intensity is reduced to a harmless level. Black paint for the interior of the passages Matt black paint Vertical height- 2m Length – not less than 3 m Width – not more than 700mm Safelamps fitted along the passageway

  23. Advantages of labyrinth: • Easy and instant access to dark room • No hazard to single-handed operator • Allows for fresh air to come in

  24. REVOLVING DOOR ENTRANCE • 3 feet in diameter. • Extends about 15” into each adjoining room. • Lightproof access to the room.

  25. DARK ROOM ILLUMINATION • White lighting • Safelighting

  26. WHITE LIGHTING • For inspection & maintenance of cassettes & screens • Cleaning of work surfaces • Servicing of equipment, changing solutions

  27. Sited close to the ceiling ; Preferably centrally placed • Moderate in intensity (60w tungsten, 30w fluorescent )

  28. SAFE LIGHTING • A source of light which will not fog the films and still provide adequate illumination under processing conditions. • Consists of a lamp fixture in which a pearl bulb of 25 W is used with a colored filter placed in front of the bulb • However no safe light is completely safe – depends on wavelength /color , intensity of light and duration of exposure.

  29. How does a safelight work ?

  30. Color of the filter depends upon the sensitivity of the x-ray film • Eg: Kodak GS-1filter with green sensitive Ortho-G film • Usually brown or olive-green lighting is used – represents region of the spectrum for which we have greatest visual sensitivity at low levels of illumination

  31. Two types : • Direct safe lighting • Indirect safe lighting

  32. SAFE-LIGHT LAMP Direct safe lighting : light from safe lamp directly falls onto the work surface Minimum distance of 1.2 m (4 feet) from the working surface Best for loading & unloading areas

  33. DIRECT SAFE LIGHT

  34. Indirect safe lighting : directs the light towards the ceiling which reflects light back into the room • Is intended to provide general illumination of the dark room • Suspended atleast 2.1 m above floor level • One for every 6.5 m2of floor space

  35. Safe lamp for both direct & indirect illumination Filters on both upper and lower surface

  36. Combination Safelight Combination Safelight is a unique two-compartment unit features a safelight at the bottom and a normal room light at the top

  37. SAFE LIGHT FILTERS • Sheet of gelatin dyed to the appropriate colour and sandwiched between two sheets of glass for protection • Used in conjunction with a 25 W lamp • Extremes of heat and moisture deteriorates the filter gelatin • Should be cleaned periodically

  38. TESTING FOR THE SAFETY OF SAFELIGHT WHEN IS TESTING REQUIRED ? • Darkroom is a new one • Safelights have been changed • New method or technique • If a particular lamp is suspect as causing fogging

  39. Film is subjected to very small exposure, just enough to cause graying • In the darkroom, one half is covered with black paper and other half exposed in the safelight • Film is processed • If uncovered portion is darker, darkroom lighting is not safe.

  40. DARK ROOM EQUIPMENTS AND LAYOUT

  41. Darkroom equipment With automatic processing With manual processing unit • Automatic processor • Loading bench • For film storage – hopper/drawers/ cupboards. • Cassette racks • Cassette hatches • Manual processing unit • Loading bench • For film storage – hopper/drawers/ cupboards. • Cassette racks • Cassette hatches • Darkroom sink • Hangers for suspending film • Processing chemicals + storage place. • Drier

  42. PROCESSING APPARATUS 1. MANUAL PROCESSING 2.AUTOMATIC PROCESSING

  43. AUTOMATIC PROCESSOR Through the wall position for an automatic processor

  44. MANUAL PROCESSING UNIT MATERIAL – PVC /Stainless steel ARRAY OF TANKS FOR MANUAL PROCESSING

  45. The loading bench: • Long enough to allow 3–4 cassettes to be placed side by side. • Min length 2.5m per operator • 600 mm min width • Min 900 mm high • Top – hard wood – teak covered with linoleum ( easy to clean, hard wearing, anti-static) • Formica is not recommended.

  46. Film hopper: • Stores the unexposed films intended for immediate use • Under the loading bench • Cone shaped drawer hinged at the lower edge • Inside is painted black • Prominent WARNING should be written on outside that it should not be opened in white light • Instead drawers and cupboards can also be used to store unused films

  47. FILM HOPPER FOR THE STORAGE OF UNEXPOSED FILMS

  48. Should open on the loading bench. Interlocking device to prevent both doors from being opened simultaneously Light proof Must also be proof against x-rays Two compartments – labelled ‘exposed’ and ‘unexposed’ on either side Cassette hatch: Two light tight and x-ray proof doors

  49. DARK ROOM DRY BENCH SYSTEM Cassette rack : Stores the loaded cassettes.

More Related