Revue internationale des sciences appliquées - Recherche et examen Libre accès

Abstrait

Assessment of Gamma Dose Rate for Hypothetical Radioactive Waste Container

Sabeeha JB, Mohammed GHK, Battawi SM, Falah SHHU, Ahmad JH and Alaa HM

Metallic solid radioactive waste class low-intermediate short lived level waste (LILSL RW) is the main type of radioactive waste generated from decommissioning operations. Transport, storage and disposal regulations require for gamma emitting radioactive waste (mainly by 137Cs isotope), that the dose rate in the proximity of the container should stand below a certain threshold. Also, the conditioning technique (using cementation technique) based on certain matrix with specific ratios should be able to attenuate the gamma radiation activity to the minimum level or to acceptable dosage rate at distance of 1 m from the container. In this paper, in absence of suitable labs for waste package assessment, hypothetical method present to assess dose rate in safe way, assumption based on metallic waste pieces contaminated with (137Cs) were conditioned with cement matrix and contained in carbon steel drum volume 220 L, 60 cm diameter then dose rate measurement applied in vicinity of the container. Instead of real contaminated metallic waste (137Cs, Dº=20 mR/h), gamma radioactive point source was positioned in different places in front of cross section of the cemented free metallic waste and gamma dose rates were measured on the outer side of the drum sample using NaI detector dose meter device. Readings showed good attenuation of gamma radiation activity (low dose rates), efficiency of the cement matrix to decrease the dose rate of (137Cs, 0.662 Mev) gamma radiation lower to acceptable values and with waste acceptance criteria and regulation.

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