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Introduction Theory of Operation Gas Usage Theory of Operation Operational Mode One size 1A P-10 gas cylinder = approximately 24 days @ 200cc / min flow. Users have reported up to a factor of 10 reduction in gas usage, using the PCM-2 Gas Manager (see “OPT12, Gas Management” on page 19-57). Radioactive emissions cause ionization of the counting gas in the detector chambers. The ions are collected at the detector anode wire causing small voltage pulses on top of the static high-voltage that is applied to the anode wire. Through capacitive coupling, the pulses are stripped from the high-voltage, amplified, and discriminated by pulse height into alpha and beta gamma channels. The detector microprocessors count the pulses, and convert the counts to count rates. Count rate information is communicated to the system controller over an RS-485 bus. The system controller applies the appropriate algorithms to update background count rates and measure for contamination. In its main task loop, the computer program continually updates background count rates for all detector channels, performs diagnostic checks, and monitors input devices to determine if a person will be measured. Numerous I /O devices are used to prompt the user and verify correct positioning for a contamination measurement. The results of the measurement are annunciated audibly and visually. The measurement is principally a qualitative determination (an alarm indicates a high probability that the person is contaminated; no alarm indicates a high probability of no contamination present). Notwithstanding, alarm annunciation includes presentation of quantitative information, i.e., activity levels are stated. Three counting modes are supported: Preset All, Maximum Sensitivity (Fixed Count Time), and Minimum Count Time. In each mode, statistical control of the counting exercise ensures that the performance of the monitor is optimized for that mode’s key parameters. The alarm set points (all three modes), RDA (mode 2), and minimum count time (mode 3) are all computed for each new background measurement. The parameters used include average background count rate, count time, sigma factor (which controls false alarm probability), confidence level, RDA and detector efficiency. Preset All 1-8 PCM-2 Technical Manual This mode maintains a fixed confidence level (probability of detection) for the user-selected RDA and count time. False alarm probability is maintained at or below a user-prescribed maximum. This mode is best used when a fixed release limit is established and lower levels of activity are of negligible concern. This mode is also useful when a fixed count time and fixed alarm set points are preferred. Thermo Electron Corporation PDF compression, OCR, web-optimization with CVISION's PdfCompressor