Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Radioactivity in everyday life

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Radioactivity in everyday life"— Presentation transcript:

1 Radioactivity in everyday life
Julia Steckling

2 Contents Units Different types of radiation Natural radioactivity
Artificial radioactivity Consequences for humans hazard-poison-radioactive.jpg Julia Steckling

3 Units (Activity) Becquerel Gray Sievert (= Gray ∙ quality factor)
Julia Steckling

4 Different types of radiation
α-particles β-particles β- decay: 𝑛 →𝑝+ 𝑒 − + 𝜈 𝑒 β+ decay: 𝑝 →𝑛+ 𝑒 + + 𝜈 𝑒 2+ Julia Steckling

5 Different types of radiation
Gamma-rays electromagnetic radiation of extremely high frequency, consists of high- energy photons X-rays ≡ low energy gamma-rays Julia Steckling

6 Different types of radiation
No. 6 in a series of essays on Radioactivity, Royal Society of Chemistry, Radiochemical Methods Group Julia Steckling

7 Natural radiation sources
Primordial radionuclides Terrestrial radiation Rocks and soil contain uranium, thorium and potassium Cosmic radiation  Secondary cosmic radiation / cosmogenic radionuclides Nuclid Half-lives Type of radiation Potassium-40 1.3 billion years Beta, Gamma Uranium-238 4.5 billion years Alpha, Gamma Uranium-235 700 million years Thorium-232 14 billion years Julia Steckling

8 Natural radiation sources
Air Radon gas in buildings: Average value 50 Bq/m³ 5-10%  100 Bq/m³ 0.04%  >1000 Bq/m³ 14,000 lung cancer death per year in USA Julia Steckling

9 Nuclides Uranium decay series Thorium decay series
Julia Steckling

10 Natural radiation sources
Average radiation exposition outside buildings in Germany (in mSv/a) Food Tea, coffee, brazil nuts Potassium-40 (0.012%) Tritium (Hydrogen-3) Carbon-14 Tobacco uploads/2012/12/Brazil-Nuts.jpg Julia Steckling

11 https://www. hknuclear
Julia Steckling

12 Limit for damage through radiation: 250 mSv
knowledge_clip_image004.jpg Julia Steckling

13 Artificial Radiation Fallout: nuclear weapons
testing almost doubled the concentration of C-14 in the Northern Hemisphere media/File:Radiocarbon_bomb_spike.svg Julia Steckling

14 Artificial Radiation - Accidents
Chernobyl (April 26, 1986): Cs-137  half live of 30 years; 0.01 mSv per year (1986: 1 mSv in Bavaria) Fukushima (March 11, 2011): no higher doses detectable in Germany (2013) uploads/2011/01/chernobyl.jpg Julia Steckling

15 Artificial Radiation Consumer products: Smoke detectors
 americium-241 Luminous watches and clocks KCl salt substitute Julia Steckling

16 Events in Germany 2000 - 2010 INES-ranking Counts per year
Year under review Events in Germany INES-ranking Level Term deviation 1 anomaly 2 incident 3 serious incident Prof. Dr. Jürgen Kiefer, Strahlen und Gesundheit, Nutzen und Risiken, 1. Auflage, Wiley-VCH, 2012 Julia Steckling

17 Consequences Julia Steckling

18 Consequences Restrictions by EU / ”Strahlenschutzverordnung”:
Maximum dose: 1 mSv/ year for general public Radiation workers: 20 mSv/year or 50 mSv/year but not more than 100 mSv/5 years Exceptions: Live-saving: 100 mSv / once a year Case of disaster: 250 mSv / once in a lifetime Working life: 400 mSv for radiation workers mSv for astronauts Julia Steckling

19 Sources Bundesministerium für Umwelt, Naturschutz, Bau und Reaktorsicherheit (BMUB) - Umweltradioaktivität und Strahlenbelastung, Jahresbericht 2013 Prof. Dr. Jürgen Kiefer, Strahlen und Gesundheit, Nutzen und Risiken, 1. Auflage, Wiley-VCH, 2012 No. 6 in a series of essays on Radioactivity, Royal Society of Chemistry, Radiochemical Methods Group Journal of Chemical Education, F. I. Hutchison, S. G. Hutchison, Radioactivity in Everyday Life, 1997 Julia Steckling

20 Radioactivity in everyday life
Julia Steckling

21 Julia Steckling


Download ppt "Radioactivity in everyday life"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google