Presentation Transcript
Nuclear Technologies and the Environment: Nuclear Technologies and the Environment Presented by the
What is radiation?: What is radiation? Energy in transit
Classified as non-ionizing or ionizing
Can be a wave (photon) or a particle
Can be charged or neutral
Types of Radiation: Types of Radiation particles
+2 charge (2 protons, 2 neutrons, no electrons)
easily shielded -- rubber gloves or paper
particles
can be an electron or a positron
can be shielded with low z material -- aluminum, glass
-rays, x-rays
photons, have no charge
variable energies
shielded by concrete, steel, or lead
neutrons
particles with neutral charge
interact strongly with boron and hydrogen
Sources of Radiation: Sources of Radiation Natural Sources
Cosmic Rays
Sunlight
Radon
Living Things
Soil, rocks Man-Made Sources
Weapons Fallout
Medical/Dental X-rays
Nuclear/Coal Power
Smoke Detectors
Industrial
Research (Universities, Laboratories)
Ionizing Radiation: Ionizing Radiation Has sufficient energy to electrically charge an atom by stripping electrons
Chemical composition can be changed
Average Personal Annual Dose: Average Personal Annual Dose 40 mrem from your own body
50 mrem from medical exposures
70 mrem from natural sources
200 mrem from radon exposure
1 mrem from weapons testing fallout
~360 mrem total annual dose
Health Effects of Radiation: Health Effects of Radiation Radiation changes living cells
body repairs low dose rate damage
body cannot repair large acute doses
Degree of effect depends on dose intensity, length of exposure, and type of cell exposed
Biological Dose Limits: Biological Dose Limits Begin to detect blood changes at 25 rem
Radiation sickness appears above 100 rem
nausea, vomiting – hair loss
exhaustion – increase cancer risk
Doses above 500 rem are usually fatal without heroic medical treatment
Slide9: Most people receive lifetimes doses of about 25 rem from background radiation. Since background radiation cannot be avoided, everyone is exposed on average to 0.360 rem/year.
The U.S. government limits doses above background to no more than 5 rem/year for occupational exposure and no more than 0.1 rem/year for the general public.
Mechanisms of Biological Damage: Mechanisms of Biological Damage Direct Effects
radiation itself interacts with cellular protein or DNA altering the chemical properties of the molecule
Indirect Effects
radiation interacts with water in the body to create free radicals which then attack other cell molecules
Acute Effects of Radiation Exposure: Acute Effects of Radiation Exposure Hemopoietic Syndrome
occurs at doses between 25 and 50 rad
affects blood forming tissues & immune system
danger of bleeding and infection
usually recover
Gastrointestinal Syndrome
occurs at doses greater than 1000 rad
affects intestinal tract and colon
body cannot absorb water or nutrients
death can occur within weeks without medical treatment
Central Nervous System Syndrome
occurs at doses greater than 2000 rad
unconsciousness within minutes of exposure
death within 48 hours
Delayed Effects of Radiation Exposure: Delayed Effects of Radiation Exposure Cancer development
Genetic effects (have not been observed in humans)
Cataracts
Engineers Protecting the Environment: Engineers Protecting the Environment Radiological Engineering
containment buildings, shielding, glove boxes
dosimetry, protective clothing
Storage and Transport Containers
spent fuel storage -- in pool, above ground
high-level waste canisters
Disposal Engineering
packaging and containment barriers
repository design
What is Radioactive Waste?: What is Radioactive Waste? By-products of any activity involving the use of a radioactive material.
Common sources are hospitals, industrial & research labs, power plants, and reprocessing & enrichment facilities.
Types of Radioactive Waste: Types of Radioactive Waste Low-Level Waste (LLW)
consists of paper, glass, gloves, clothing, tools
low contamination levels of isotopes with half-lives less than 30 years
High-Level Waste (HLW)
consists of spent fuel, liquid reprocessing wastes, weapons wastes
highly radioactive with long lived isotopes
Transuranic Waste (TRU)
consists of fuel and weapons processing wastes
contaminated with elements heavier than uranium
Environmental Effects of Weapons Testing: Environmental Effects of Weapons Testing Over 200 atmospheric weapons tests occurred between 1945-1963
Environmental radiation contamination has been decreasing since 1963, but some effects remain
fission products -- and emitters -- Sr-90, Cs-137
neutron activation products
C-14 from activated atmospheric nitrogen
Co-60 from activated steel weapons parts & towers
unused weapons parts -- uranium, plutonium, tritium
Additional Environmental Effects of Weapons Testing: Additional Environmental Effects of Weapons Testing Contamination of islands in the South Pacific were testing was conducted. Some islanders had to be removed from their homes in the seventies. Most have since returned.
Destruction of indigenous plant and animal life due to heat and blast wave shock effects in addition to radiation damage.
Environmental Effects of the Chernobyl Accident: Environmental Effects of the Chernobyl Accident Increased incidence of thyroid cancer in children
No significant increase in leukemia
Many stress-related illnesses appearing
600 million person-rem global dose
40% on former U.S.S.R., 50% in Europe, 10% elsewhere
Unsure of food production and ecological changes
Only 1% of original radiation remains today
HUGE benefit from the tragedy -- new, vital data concerning human health effects of ionizing radiation
Environmental Effects of the Three Mile Island Accident: Environmental Effects of the Three Mile Island Accident VERY little radiation actually released outside of the reactor building
No known increases in radiation related health effects - some stress-related increases
Ongoing reactor clean-up
Community fear is largest long-term effect
No known effects on the surrounding ecology
Radioactive Waste Disposal Options: Radioactive Waste Disposal Options LLW dispose in steel barrels inside concrete lined trenches. Clay soil cover retards water movement.
SNL stored in reactor pool or in above ground casks until Yucca Mountain or other repository opens.
HLW vitrified and placed in steel drums. Stored in warehouse until Yucca Mountain or other repository opens.
TRU vitrified and put in steel canisters. Solid wastes are placed in storage boxes. Will be placed in New Mexico salt bed at the WIPP site.
Beneficial Uses of Radioisotopes: Beneficial Uses of Radioisotopes Medical Sterilization
Cancer Treatment
Food Irradiation to kill parasites and microorganisms
Tracers to learn about groundwater flow or biological processes
Travel security measures
How Safe is Disposal?: How Safe is Disposal? We CAN design packages to withstand the environment for up to 500 year.
We CAN engineer barriers to retard the migration of possible releases.
We attempt to predict how long that it would take for the radiation to reach the “accessible environment.”
With proper monitoring, we could anticipate and react to foreseeable problems.
Storage Versus Disposal: Storage Versus Disposal Disposal at central location - storage at several different sites
Storage seen daily and actively monitored - some people believe disposal will be out of sight, out of mind (still actively monitored)
Package integrity similar in both cases, but you can actually see containers stored above ground