Radiation Processing Industry - The Early Year
Radiation Processing Industry - The Early Year
Radiation Processing Industry - The Early Year
November 2022
International Irradiation Association
Cover Photo: John Masefield (right) at the control console of the potato irradiator
Photo Credit: Getty Images - BET:516571460
Table of Contents
1 List of Abbreviations
5 In Tribute to John Masefield
7 Introduction
8 Fathers of The Radiation Processing Industry
8 John Masefield (1933-2022)
10 Roy Errington (1915-1996)
11 Arthur Charlesby (1915-1996)
12 Charles Artandi (1917-1980)
13 Paul Cooke (1924-2020)
14 Marsh Cleland (1926-2019)
15 Pierre Vidal (1910-2002)
16 Sam Nablo (1930 -2018)
17 Early Production of Cobalt-60
20 The First Commercial Gamma Irradiators
20 The Ethicon Irradiator
21 The First Multipurpose Gamma Irradiators
23 The First Industrial Accelerators
24 The First In-House Industrial Accelerators
25 The First Contract Service Accelerators
26 Development of Applications
31 Medical Device Sterilisation
34 Food Irradiation
39 Cultural Heritage Preservation
43 Annex 1: List of IMRP Laureates
45 Annex 2: The First International Meeting on
Radiation Processing (1976)
48 References
In Tribute to John Masefield
This document is published by the International Irradiation Association on the occasion of
the 20th International Meeting on Radiation Processing and in tribute to John Masefield, a
pioneer of the radiation processing industry who chaired the Association during the first
two decades of its existence.
It seemed opportune to try to narrate in a single document the developments that took
place in a period going approximately from 1950 to 1980 because this is when radiation
processing became more than a research theme and transformed into an industry.
It did not happen all in one place or over a short period of time. Rather, during these
booming years, there was a flurry of ideas to domesticate a new form of energy for
peaceful purposes. These ideas and attempts to implement them frequently appeared
simultaneously in different countries.
Yves Henon is the principal author of this document. Yves joined the irradiation community
in 1980, at the end of the period being covered, first working in a research centre, then
managing irradiation plants before becoming a consultant for the IAEA and the iia. He is
therefore well placed to reflect on the evolution of our industry.
The focus on North America and Europe is perhaps exaggerated. We are aware that
important developments have also occurred elsewhere, for example in Japan. The time
and resources available to write this document combined with the difficulty in finding
or accessing certain historical sources of information have imposed limits to this work.
Perhaps it will be taken up, improved, and expanded by others. In the meantime, it is
hoped that readers will find these stories useful.
We would like to thank the following people for their help and contribution:
Paul Wynne
Chairman, International Irradiation Association
Yves Hénon
Director, International Irradiation Association
A tribute to
John Masefield (1933-2022)
IMRP Laureate 1984
In 1978 Charles Artandi was named the “Father of Irradiation Sterilisation.” The Ethicon
irradiation plant which he established in New Jersey by 1960 became the Mecca for people
with an interest in radiation sterilisation from all over the world.
Born in Hungary where he achieved his PhD in the Royal Hungarian University of
Budapest, Charles Artandi first joined Johnson & Johnson in Australia, prior to his transfer
to its Ethicon subsidiary in 1953 [7]. He was assigned the task of developing reliable
sterilisation techniques. Having decided to focus on irradiation, Charles and his team
produced foundation work on the effects of radiation on one hundred different types of
microorganisms, suture materials, and a great variety of packaging materials. The value
of 25 kGy as a minimum sterilising dose originates from a study that he and Walton Van
Winkle performed in 1959 [8].
In 1976, Artandi was with C.W. Bruch (US FDA) behind the creation of a North American
Working Group, under the auspices of the Association for the Advancement of Medical
Instrumentation (AAMI) to develop guidelines for controlling the sterilisation of medical
devices by radiation. This included the development of satisfactory methods for
determining the approximate dose of radiation required to sterilise devices.
Vice President of Research and Development of Ethicon, Inc., Charles Artandi was
awarded the Johnson Medal for Research and Development in 1978 —the highest honour
the company offers—for his leadership in the development of irradiation technology. In
the same year he received the American Nuclear Society’s Radiation Industry Award for
his pioneering achievements. He received posthumously the Atomic Energy of Canada
Pioneer Award for his achievements in the field of dosimetry, radiation sterilisation,
standards and methods.
Charles Artandi died during the preparation of the Second Kilmer Conference, held in
Washington DC in 1980. His colleagues on the organising committee wrote in the preamble
of the proceedings: There appears from time to time an individual whose particular gifts
enable him to exercise a profound and beneficent influence on his colleagues. Charles
Artandi was such a man. During his long career he became a recognized international
authority on industrial sterilisation and occupied many positions where his understanding
and willingness to help enabled him to contribute much of value [7].
The world’s first commercial gamma irradiation plant was constructed at Dandenong,
Victoria, for the company Gamma Sterilisation Pty Ltd. in 1959. It had an initial load
of 150,000 curies of cobalt-60 and was designed to irradiate goat hair bales exported
to the UK parent company Westminster Carpets to manufacture carpets. There was a
concern that the deadly bacteria anthrax could be present in the wool, and irradiation
was a good safety measure, the same as used many years later for government mail in
the United States. The advent of synthetic materials put a stop to the import of goat hair
to manufacture carpets and consequently irradiation was no longer needed. The plant
continued operating as a general-purpose irradiator, sterilising various medical products
and biological tissues on a contract basis until 1976. It was then declared obsolete and
dismantled, the cobalt-60 being sold and transferred to the Australian Atomic Energy
Commission. It had also suffered from competition. In 1971, an AECL JS6500 radiation
plant was installed — also at Dandenong — for Tasman Vaccine Laboratory (Australia)
Pty Ltd., a subsidiary of Tasman Vaccine Laboratory (New Zealand) Pty Ltd. These com-
panies were acquired in 1976 by I.C.I. (New Zealand). Contract sterilisation was the main
business with a small part of the capacity being used for the company’s own products,
mainly dressings. In 1972, Johnson & Johnson (Australia) Pty Ltd. built the third Aus-
tralian industrial radiation plant in Botany (New South Wales), also an AECL JS6500, to
sterilise their own products only [20].
adiator [21]
Figure: The Ethicon irr
East Germany – Rossendorf Zentralinst für Kernforschung Own design 0.5 1967
Charles Artandi †
2 Miami, USA 1978
Paul Cooke †
William Baird †
3 Tokyo, Japan 1980
Arthur Charlesby †
John Masefield †
5 San Diego, USA 1984
Vivian Stannett
Ken Morganstern V
6 Ottawa, Canada 1987
Joe Silverman †
Frank Fraser †
Frank Ley † 7 Noordwijkerhout, Netherlands 1989
Sam Nablo †
Marshall Cleland †
8 Beijing, China 1992
Joseph Farkas †
Jan Leemhorst †
William McLaughlin † 9 Istanbul, Turkey 1994
Pierre Vidal †
Sueo Machi †
10 Anaheim, USA 1997
Arne Miller
Masaaki Takehisa
11 Melbourne, Australia 1999
Alan Tallentire †
Joyce Hansen
12 Avignon, France 2001
Robert Morrissey †
Yves Jongen
13 Chicago, USA 2003
George West
John Corley
Theo Sadat 14 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 2006
James Whitby †
Dieter Ehlermann
15 London, UK 2008
Rocco Basson †
Olgun Güven
John Kowalski 16 Montreal, Canada 2011
Wang Chuanzhen †
Andrzej Chmielewski
17 Shanghai, PR China 2013
Paul Minbiole
Mohamad Al-Sheikhly
18 Vancouver, Canada 2016
Zhang Xianghua
Maria Helena Sampa
19 Strasbourg, France 2019
Yves Henon
† = Laureate is Deceased
The first symposium dedicated to radiation sterilisation was organised on 7-8 December
1964 in Risø, Denmark, with the support of the UK Panel on gamma and electron. Ten
years later, Johnson & Johnson sponsored a first international conference on Technical
Developments and Prospects of Sterilization by Ionizing Radiation (Vienna, Austria, 1-4
April 1974), and held the First Kilmer Conference in East Windsor, New Jersey, on April,
30 - May 1, 1976.
The project to periodically hold a conference that would address all irradiation technologies
and applications was formed by several people, among which John Masefield. The First
International Meeting on Radiation Processing (IMRP 1) was held in Dorado, Puerto Rico
at the Cerromar Beach Hotel on 10-13 May 1976. In retrospect, the punchline selected for
the conference had something of a prophecy: Radiation’s Time Has Arrived.
The meeting was sponsored by the American Nuclear Society, the American Chemical
Society, and the Society of Plastics Engineers.
K.H. Morganstern (Radiation Dynamics) was Chairman of the conference and V.T.
Stannett was Chairman of the program committee composed of A. Chapiro, A. Charlesby,
W. McLaughlin, S. Okamura, J. Silverman, and Y. Tabata.
The table on the next page is a list of the presentations and speakers.
November 2022