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RADIATION PROTECTION

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RADIATION PROTECTION Abdul-Wali M.S. Ajlouni Applied Physics Department Tafila Technical university, Tafila, Jordan INTRNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND EDUCATION – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RADIATION PROTECTION


1
RADIATION PROTECTION
  • Abdul-Wali M.S. Ajlouni
  • Applied Physics Department
  • Tafila Technical university,
  • Tafila, Jordan
  • INTRNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND
    EDUCATION
  • 17-19, MARCH 2009
  • CAIRO UNIVERSITY - EGYPT

2
Jordan
3
Safety Questions
  • What do rules have to do?
  • How can you do?
  • Why are requirements so different?

4
The Primary Aim
  • To provide appropriate standards of protection
    and safety for people without unduly limiting the
    benefits of practices giving rise to exposure.

5
3 Principles
  • Justification
  • net benefitbenefit-risk
  • Optimization ALARA
  • As Low As Reasonably Achievable
  • Dose Limitation

6
Objectives
  • prevent the occurrence of deterministic effects
  • ensure that all reasonable steps are taken to
    reduce the occurrence of stochastic effects

7
Means to Reduce Exposure
  • Facility and equipment design
  • Reducing the time spent in radiation areas
  • Reducing the number of workers necessary
  • Reducing dose rates
  • Specialized training

8
Dose Limits
  • Occupational exposure
  • 20 mSv/a averaged over five consecutive years
    50 mSv in a single year
  • Public exposure
  • 1 mSv/a 5 mSv in a single year provided that
    the average dose over five consecutive years does

9
Program
  • Protection and safety program in place, and
    supported and signed by the licensee
  • Definition of functions and responsibilities
  • Provisions to ensure that these responsibilities
    are understood by the persons concerned
  • Provisions to ensure that only qualified and
    accredited staff assumes the responsibilities for
    using radiation
  • Program in place for education and training, and
    continuing professional development

10
Radiation
  • (Nuclear) Energy released from the atomic
    nucleus.
  • E  mc²

11
Nuclear Radiation
12
Electromagnetic Radiation
  • Heat waves Radiowaves
  • Infrared light Visible light
  • Ultraviolet light X rays Gamma rays

13
Nuclear Energy is Released as
  • Radiation Radioactive Decay,
  • Fission, and
  • Fusion.

14
Radiation Types
15
(No Transcript)
16
Ionization Excitation
17
Radiation Penetration
18
Uses of Radiation Sources
  • Medicine
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Education
  • Sealed sources with the radioactive materials
    firmly contained or bound within a suitable
    capsule or housing.
  • Unsealed sources, may lead to contamination of
    the environment and the intake of radioactive
    materials into the human body.

19
Uses Applications
20
Nuclear Fission
21
Nuclear Fission
  • Enormous energy release,
  • Neutrons
  • Fission products

22
Released Energy
  • Fission of one U atom32010-13 J.
  • Fission of 1Kg U23106 kwh.
  • 23106 kwh produced from
  • 3106 kg (3000 ton) of coal, or
  • 2.5106 Kg of oil (12000 barrel)

23
Nuclear Reactor
24
Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station
25
Neutrons
  • Transmutation
  • Neutron activation analysis

26
Critical Problems with NP
  • Cost
  • Safety
  • Waste
  • Proliferation

27
NP support
  • emission of carbon dioxide
  • stable costs
  • Availability of U

28
Fission products
  • Nuclear wastes
  • Nuclear weapons
  • Reactor release ordinary,
  • Accidents

29
Chernobyl
30
Reactor releases
  • Health consequences
  • FP Behavior within Terrestrial Ecosystems
  • FP Behavior within and Water Ecosystems

31
Nuclear Weapons
  • 20-30 of the cases from primary burns,
  • 50-60 from mechanical injuries, secondary burns,
  • and,
  • 15 from the radiation injuries.

32
Conclusion
  • Nuclear (radiation) industry is highly safe.
  • Extended applications
  • Growth in global energy demand
  • Oil and gas resources limitations
  • Oil price rising (price instability)
  • Increase use of electricity
  • The global warming due to fossil fuel
  • Availability of nuclear fuel
  • UTILIZING NUCLEAR INDUSTRY IS OUR DESTINATION.

33
  • THANK YOU
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