Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carmela Carpentieri is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carmela Carpentieri.


Indoor Air | 2014

Radon in indoor air of primary schools: a systematic survey to evaluate factors affecting radon concentration levels and their variability

F. Bochicchio; Z. S. Žunić; Carmela Carpentieri; S. Antignani; Vinicio Carelli; Carlo Cordedda; Nenad Veselinovic; T. Tollefsen; P. Bossew

UNLABELLED In order to optimize the design of a national survey aimed to evaluate radon exposure of children in schools in Serbia, a pilot study was carried out in all the 334 primary schools of 13 municipalities of Southern Serbia. Based on data from passive measurements, rooms with annual radon concentration >300 Bq/m(3) were found in 5% of schools. The mean annual radon concentration weighted with the number of pupils is 73 Bq/m(3), 39% lower than the unweighted 119 Bq/m(3) average concentration. The actual average concentration when children are in classrooms could be substantially lower. Variability between schools (CV = 65%), between floors (CV = 24%) and between rooms at the same floor (CV = 21%) was analyzed. The impact of school location, floor, and room usage on radon concentration was also assessed (with similar results) by univariate and multivariate analyses. On average, radon concentration in schools within towns is a factor of 0.60 lower than in villages and at higher floors is a factor of 0.68 lower than ground floor. Results can be useful for other countries with similar soil and building characteristics. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS On average, radon concentrations are substantially higher in schools in villages than in schools located in towns (double,on average). Annual radon concentrations exceeding 300 Bq/m3 were found in 5% of primary schools (generally on ground floors of schools in villages). The considerable variability of radon concentration observed between and within floors indicates a need to monitor concentrations in several rooms for each floor. A single radon detector for each room can be used provided that the measurement error is considerable lower than variability of radon concentration between rooms.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2011

Assessment of long-term radon concentration measurement precision in field conditions (Serbian Schools) for a survey carried out by an international collaboration

Carmela Carpentieri; Zora S. Zunic; Vinicio Carelli; Carlo Cordedda; G. Ferrigno; Nenad Veselinovic; Peter Bossew; Tore Tollefsen; Olivera Cuknic; Z. Vojinovic; F. Bochicchio

In an international collaboration, a long-term radon concentration survey was carried out in schools of Southern Serbia with radon detectors prepared, etched and read-out in Italy. In such surveys it is necessary to evaluate measurement precision in field conditions, and to check whether quality assurance protocols were effective in keeping uncertainties under control, despite the complex organisation of measurements. In the first stage of the survey, which involves only some of the total number of municipalities, paired detectors were exposed in each monitored room in order to experimentally assess measurement precision. Paired passive devices (containing CR-39 detectors) were exposed for two consecutive 6-month periods. Two different measurement systems were used to read out CR-39s of the first and second period, respectively. The median of the coefficient of variation (CV) of the measured exposures was 8 % for 232 paired devices of the first 6-month period and 4 % for 242 paired devices of the second 6-month period, respectively. This difference was mainly due to a different track count repeatability of the two read-out systems, which was 4 and 1 %, respectively, as the median value of CV of repeated countings. The in-field measured precision results are very similar to the precision assessed in calibration conditions and are much lower than the room-to-room variation of radon concentration in the monitored schools. Moreover, a quality assurance protocol was followed to reduce extra-exposures during detector transport from Rome to schools measured and back.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2014

Results from time integrated measurements of indoor radon, thoron and their decay product concentrations in schools in the Republic of Macedonia

Zdenka Stojanovska; Zora S. Zunic; Peter Bossew; F. Bochicchio; Carmela Carpentieri; Rosaline Mishra; R.P. Rout; B.K. Sapra; Bety D. Burghele; Alexandra Cucos-Dinu; Blazo Boev; Constantin Cosma

As part of a survey on concentrations of radon, thoron and their decay products in different indoor environments of the Balkan region involving international collaboration, measurements were performed in 43 schools from 5 municipalities of the Republic of Macedonia. The time-integrated radon and thoron gas concentrations (CRn and CTn) were measured by CR-39 (placed in chambers with different diffusion barriers), whereas the equilibrium equivalent radon and thoron concentrations (EERC and EETC) were measured using direct radon-thoron progeny sensors consisting of LR-115 nuclear track detectors. The detectors were deployed at a distance of at least 0.5 m from the walls as well as far away from the windows and doors in order to obtain more representative samples of air from the breathing zone; detectors were exposed over a 3-month period (March-May 2012). The geometric mean (GM) values [and geometric standard deviations (GSDs)] of CRn, CTn, EERC and EETC were 76 (1.7), 12 (2.3), 27 (1.4) and 0.75 Bq m(-3) (2.5), respectively. The equilibrium factors between radon and its decay products (FRn) and thoron and its decay products (FTn (>0.5 m)) were evaluated: FRn ranged between 0.10 and 0.84 and FTn (>0.5 m) ranged between 0.003 and 0.998 with GMs (and GSDs) equal to 0.36 (1.7) and 0.07 (3.4), respectively.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2018

Analytical method for evaluating (and correcting) the impact of outdoor radon concentration on the estimates of percentage of dwellings exceeding reference levels

S. Antignani; Carmela Carpentieri; F. Bochicchio

Outdoor radon concentration contributes to indoor radon levels, generally causing a shift from lognormal distribution of measured radon concentration data distribution, and it makes more challenging the estimation of radon distribution parameters on the basis of the lognormal assumption. In particular, lognormal assumption with no correction could lead to a significantly biased estimate of the percentage of dwellings exceeding a certain level, e.g. a reference level (RL), since this is based on biased estimates of geometric mean (GM) and geometric standard deviation (GSD) of radon concentration distribution. Subtracting to each measured data a constant outdoor radon level can usually compensate data distribution departure from log-normality (except for low radon levels), if the appropriate outdoor level value is chosen by means of a lognormal fit of the data. This approach - already (but not always) used in literature - cannot be applied in cases where all the data of radon concentrations are not available (e.g., for a review study). For these cases, this work presents an analytical method to quantitatively evaluate and correct the impact of outdoor on the lognormal distribution parameter estimates and, in particular, on the percentages of dwellings exceeding radon reference levels. The proposed method is applied to a number of possible situations, with different values of outdoor radon level, GM and GSD. The results show that outdoor radon levels generally produce an underestimation of the actual GSD parameter, which increases as the outdoor level increases, and in the worse cases, could lead to an underestimation higher than 50%. Consequently, if the outdoor contribution is not properly taken into account, the percentage of dwellings exceeding a certain RL is almost always underestimated, even by 80%-90% for RL equal to 300 Bq/m3. This could have implications for the classification of areas as regards radon concentration and for the estimation of avertable lung cancers attributable to radon levels higher than some possible RLs.


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2017

THE NATIONAL RADON ARCHIVE AS A USEFUL TOOL FOR DEVELOPING AND UPDATING THE NATIONAL RADON ACTION PLAN

F. Bochicchio; S. Antignani; Carmela Carpentieri; M. Ampollini; B. Caccia; S Pozzi

International recommendations and regulations require developing of National Radon Action Plans (NRAPs) to effectively manage the protection of workers and population from radon exposure. In Italy, a NRAP was published in 2002 and several activities have been carried out in this framework. Information and data regarding these and previous activities have been collected in a National Radon Archive (NRA). Activities carried out by institutionally involved institutes and agencies include several national and regional surveys, involving more than 50 000 indoor environments (dwellings, schools and workplaces), and remedial actions performed in ~350 buildings, largely in schools. Data collected in the NRA allowed also to estimate that lung cancer deaths attributable to radon exposure in Italy are ~3400 per year. On-going developments of the Italian NRA finalized to effectively use it as tool for developing, monitoring and updating the NRAP are also described.


Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2014

Geographical distribution of the annual mean radon concentrations in primary schools of Southern Serbia - application of geostatistical methods.

Peter Bossew; Zora S. Žunić; Zdenka Stojanovska; Tore Tollefsen; Carmela Carpentieri; Nenad Veselinovic; S. Komatina; Janja Vaupotič; R.D. Simović; S. Antignani; F. Bochicchio


Radiation Protection Dosimetry | 2014

An evaluation of thoron (and radon) equilibrium factor close to walls based on long-term measurements in dwellings.

Rosaline Mishra; Zora S. Zunic; F. Bochicchio; Zdenka Stojanovska; Carmela Carpentieri; R. Prajith; B.K. Sapra; Y.S. Mayya; Tetsuo Ishikawa; Yasutaka Omori; Nenad Veselinovic; Tore Tollefsen; Predrag Ujić; Peter Bossew


Archive | 2013

Some results of a radon survey in 207 Serbian schools

Zora S. Zunic; Carmela Carpentieri; Zdenka Stojanovska; S. Antignani; Nenad Veselinovic; Tore Tollefsen; Vinicio Carelli; Carlo Cordedda; Olivera Cuknic; Jelena Filipovic; Peter Bossew; F. Bochicchio


Nuclear Technology & Radiation Protection | 2013

High annual radon concentration in dwellings and natural radioactivity content in nearby soil in some rural areas of Kosovo and Metohija

R Ljiljana Gulan; F. Bochicchio; Carmela Carpentieri; A Gordana Milic; M Jelena Stajic; Z Dragana Krstic; A Zdenka Stojanovska; R Dragoslav Nikezic; S Zora Zunic


Radiation Measurements | 2009

A national survey on radon concentration in underground inspection rooms and in buildings of a telephone company: methods and first results

Vinicio Carelli; V. Bianco; Carlo Cordedda; G. Ferrigno; Carmela Carpentieri; F. Bochicchio

Collaboration


Dive into the Carmela Carpentieri's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

F. Bochicchio

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Antignani

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tore Tollefsen

Institute for Transuranium Elements

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rosaline Mishra

Bhabha Atomic Research Centre

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge