Mass attenuation coefficient
The mass attenuation coefficient (also known as the mass absorption coefficient) is a constant describing the fraction of photons removed from a monochromatic x-ray beam by a homogenous absorber per unit mass.
It is equivalent to the linear attenuation coefficient divided by the density of the absorber (μ/ρ), and is expressed in cm/g.
The Beer-Lambert law, which describes the attenuation of a homogenous x-ray beam, can be modified to accommodate the mass attenuation coefficient in the following equation:
I = I0e
- I = transmitted intensity
- I0 = incident intensity
- μ/ρ = mass attenuation coefficient (cm/g)
- μ = linear attenuation coefficient (cm)
- ρ = density (g/cm)
- ρx = mass thickness (g/cm)
- x = path length (cm)