+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Radiation in Your Environment

Radiation in Your Environment

Date post: 21-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: bryce
View: 47 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Radiation in Your Environment. Radiation Around You. Nature Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced radioactivity Terrestrial (including radon) Medical Consumer Products Transportation Nuclear Power Nuclear Weapons Fallout. Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
25
Radiation in Your Environment
Transcript
Page 1: Radiation in Your Environment

Radiation in Your Environment

Page 2: Radiation in Your Environment

Radiation Around You

• Nature– Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced

radioactivity– Terrestrial (including radon)

• Medical• Consumer Products• Transportation• Nuclear Power• Nuclear Weapons Fallout

Page 3: Radiation in Your Environment

Naturally Occurring Radioactive Material

• Primordial radionuclides- left over from when the earth was created.

• Cosmogenic radioactivity - Radionuclides produced when cosmic radiation interacts with the upper atmosphere

Page 4: Radiation in Your Environment

Cosmic Radiation

• The primary source of cosmic radiation is outside this solar system: sun and stars

• The atmosphere and the earth’s magnetic field act as a shield against radiation, reducing the radiation that reaches the earth’s surface.

• Higher doses at higher altitudes.

Page 5: Radiation in Your Environment

Terrestrial Radiation

• Primordial radionuclides in rock and soil• Primarily long lived nuclides

– K-40 (also in food)• Body contains about 0.1 µCi which produces

0.2 mSv(20 mrem) per year– U-238 series

• Source of radon in buildings– Th-232 series

Page 6: Radiation in Your Environment

Environmental Monitoring

Page 7: Radiation in Your Environment

Primary Objective of a Nuclear Facility

Keep radioactive effluents at a minimumParticulate filters to remove

particles from air effluentsCharcoal filters to remove iodineHold-up tanks or charcoal traps to

allow radioactive noble gasses to decay

Filter liquid effluents

Page 8: Radiation in Your Environment

Environmental Monitoring

Purpose:To detect any radioactivity

released by a nuclear facilityTo look for high activities of

natural radioactivityVerify and validate radioactive

effluent monitoring program

Page 9: Radiation in Your Environment

Reasons for Environmental

MonitoringExternal regulators

Nuclear Regulatory CommissionEnvironmental Protection Agency

Internal motivationEnvironmental stewardshipInsurance (American Nuclear

Insurers)Concern for ourselves, families,

and neighbors

Page 10: Radiation in Your Environment

Nuclear Facilities

Program for nuclear facilities:Radioactive Environmental

Monitoring Program (REMP)Sampling for a period of three

years prior to operationAssess natural radioactivity

Continual sampling during operationLook for radionuclides from the plant

Page 11: Radiation in Your Environment

Nuclear Facilities REMP

Measure:Radioactivity

Air Water Food

Radiation dose At site boundary Public exposures

Page 12: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Objectives

Protection of environment and people from releases

Documentation of existing and continuing radiological conditions

Compliance with regulationsDocumentation of unanticipated

environmental effectsProtection from legal liabilitiesResearch: verification of models

Page 13: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Design

Facility informationRadioactivity producedPhysical form

ParticulatesGassesChemical

Effluent controlsPathway information

Page 14: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: What to Measure

Direct gamma radiationThermoluminescent dosimetersIonization meters (real time)

Air pathways (inhalation/ingestion)Air (particulates/iodine)CropsGrass-cow-milk pathway

Page 15: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: How to Measure

Continuous measurements of effluentsStack monitors to measure airborne

effluentsRadiation monitors in liquid streams

Periodic grab samples from environmentFood products (milk, fish, vegetables,

etc.)Plants (pasture grass, broad leaf

vegetation)

Page 16: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: MeasurementsDirect Radiation

Thermo- Luminescent Dosimeters (TLD) measure radiation from facility

Page 17: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: MeasurementsDirect Radiation

Page 18: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Water Measurements

Water pathways (ingestion)WaterFishAquifersInvertebratesField/outfall mixing zones

Page 19: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Air Measurements

Noble gases: Not chemically reactiveReadily dispersed

Gases of interestXe-133, Xe-135

Short half-lives (5.2 day, 9.1 hr)Kr-85

Long half-life (10.8 yr)

Page 20: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Air Measurements

Tritium (H-3)Liquid effluents

Cannot remove from water

Iodine and particulatesI-131, Cs-137, Sr-90,Co-60

Readily removed from effluentVery small releases

Page 21: Radiation in Your Environment

REMP: Air Measurements

Low volume air sampler measures particulate material and iodine

Page 22: Radiation in Your Environment

Natural Radioactivity

Cosmic ray producedH-3, C-14, Na-22, Be-7

4 million Curies of H-3 produced each year

TerrestrialUranium-238 and Thorium-232

seriesRadium and radon

Potassium-40, Rubidium-87

Page 23: Radiation in Your Environment

Typical Radioactivity in the EnvironmentAir particulates

Gross beta: 0.004 - 0.04 pCi/m3

Be-7: 0.02 - 0.2 pCi/m3

Air IodineNot detectable

SoilSr-90: 0.02 - 0.2 pCi/gCs-137: 0.1 - 1.0 pCi/gK-40: 5 - 20 pCi/gRa-226: 10 - 50 pCi/g

Page 24: Radiation in Your Environment

Typical Radioactivity in the EnvironmentPrecipitation

Gross beta: 1 - 4 pCi/LH-3: 75 - 200 pCi/LBe-7: 40 - 100 pCi/L

WaterGross beta: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/LH-3: 75 - 200 pCi/:L I-131: 0.25 - 1.0 pCi/L (hospital

releases)Sediment

Cs-137: 0.1 - 1.0 pCi/g

Page 25: Radiation in Your Environment

Typical Radioactivity in the EnvironmentFish

Sr-90: 0.002 - 0.02 pCi/gCs-137: 0.01 - 0.02 pCi/g

Milk I-131: not detectableCs-137: 1 - 10 pCi/LK-40: 1000 - 2300 pCi/LSr-90: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/L

Food productsK-40: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/gSr-90: 0.002 - 0.02 pCi/g


Recommended