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Radiation in Your Environment. Radiation Around You Nature –Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced radioactivity –Terrestrial (including radon) Medical Consumer.

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Presentation on theme: "Radiation in Your Environment. Radiation Around You Nature –Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced radioactivity –Terrestrial (including radon) Medical Consumer."— Presentation transcript:

1 Radiation in Your Environment

2 Radiation Around You Nature –Cosmic (direct and cosmic-produced radioactivity –Terrestrial (including radon) Medical Consumer Products Transportation Nuclear Power Nuclear Weapons Fallout

3 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

4 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.

5 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

6 Environmental Monitoring

7 Primary Objective of a Nuclear Facility  Keep radioactive effluents at a minimum  Particulate filters to remove particles from air effluents  Charcoal filters to remove iodine  Hold-up tanks or charcoal traps to allow radioactive noble gasses to decay  Filter liquid effluents

8 Environmental Monitoring  Purpose:  To detect any radioactivity released by a nuclear facility  To look for high activities of natural radioactivity  Verify and validate radioactive effluent monitoring program

9 Reasons for Environmental Monitoring  External regulators  Nuclear Regulatory Commission  Environmental Protection Agency  Internal motivation  Environmental stewardship  Insurance (American Nuclear Insurers)  Concern for ourselves, families, and neighbors

10 Nuclear Facilities  Program for nuclear facilities:  Radioactive Environmental Monitoring Program (REMP)  Sampling for a period of three years prior to operation Assess natural radioactivity  Continual sampling during operation Look for radionuclides from the plant

11 Nuclear Facilities REMP  Measure:  Radioactivity  Air  Water  Food  Radiation dose  At site boundary  Public exposures

12 REMP: Objectives  Protection of environment and people from releases  Documentation of existing and continuing radiological conditions  Compliance with regulations  Documentation of unanticipated environmental effects  Protection from legal liabilities  Research: verification of models

13 REMP: Design  Facility information  Radioactivity produced  Physical form Particulates Gasses Chemical  Effluent controls  Pathway information

14 REMP: What to Measure  Direct gamma radiation  Thermoluminescent dosimeters  Ionization meters (real time)  Air pathways (inhalation/ingestion)  Air (particulates/iodine)  Crops  Grass-cow-milk pathway

15 REMP: How to Measure  Continuous measurements of effluents  Stack monitors to measure airborne effluents  Radiation monitors in liquid streams  Periodic grab samples from environment  Food products (milk, fish, vegetables, etc.)  Plants (pasture grass, broad leaf vegetation)

16 REMP: Measurements Direct Radiation Thermo- Luminescent Dosimeters (TLD) measure radiation from facility

17 REMP: Measurements Direct Radiation

18 REMP: Water Measurements  Water pathways (ingestion)  Water  Fish  Aquifers  Invertebrates  Field/outfall mixing zones

19 REMP: Air Measurements  Noble gases:  Not chemically reactive  Readily dispersed  Gases of interest  Xe-133, Xe-135  Short half-lives (5.2 day, 9.1 hr)  Kr-85  Long half-life (10.8 yr)

20 REMP: Air Measurements  Tritium (H-3)  Liquid effluents Cannot remove from water  Iodine and particulates  I-131, Cs-137, Sr-90,Co-60 Readily removed from effluent Very small releases

21 REMP: Air Measurements Low volume air sampler measures particulate material and iodine

22 Natural Radioactivity  Cosmic ray produced  H-3, C-14, Na-22, Be-7 4 million Curies of H-3 produced each year  Terrestrial  Uranium-238 and Thorium-232 series Radium and radon  Potassium-40, Rubidium-87

23 Typical Radioactivity in the Environment  Air particulates  Gross beta: 0.004 - 0.04 pCi/m 3  Be-7: 0.02 - 0.2 pCi/m 3  Air Iodine  Not detectable  Soil  Sr-90: 0.02 - 0.2 pCi/g  Cs-137: 0.1 - 1.0 pCi/g  K-40: 5 - 20 pCi/g  Ra-226: 10 - 50 pCi/g

24 Typical Radioactivity in the Environment  Precipitation  Gross beta: 1 - 4 pCi/L  H-3: 75 - 200 pCi/L  Be-7: 40 - 100 pCi/L  Water  Gross beta: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/L  H-3: 75 - 200 pCi/:L  I-131: 0.25 - 1.0 pCi/L (hospital releases)  Sediment  Cs-137: 0.1 - 1.0 pCi/g

25 Typical Radioactivity in the Environment  Fish  Sr-90: 0.002 - 0.02 pCi/g  Cs-137: 0.01 - 0.02 pCi/g  Milk  I-131: not detectable  Cs-137: 1 - 10 pCi/L  K-40: 1000 - 2300 pCi/L  Sr-90: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/L  Food products  K-40: 0.5 - 5.0 pCi/g  Sr-90: 0.002 - 0.02 pCi/g


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