Title: Radioactive Material Handling
1Radioactive Material Handling
ACADs (08-006) Covered Keywords Inter
personal Relations, Pre-job preparation, Area
controls, Special Considerations, Airborne
Radioactivity, Airborne Controls, Airborne
Monitoring, Protective Clothing, Respiratory
Protection, Dosimetry, Work Documents,
Radioactive Material Handling, Radioactive Waste,
Shipping Radioactive Material
3.3.3.9 3.3.3.12 3.3.8.22 3.3.10.1 3.3.10.2 3.3.10.3
3.3.10.5 3.3.10.6 3.3.10.7 3.3.10.8 3.3.10.9 3.3.10.10
3.3.10.13 3.3.10.14 3.3.10.15 3.3.10.18 3.3.10.19 3.3.11.7
3.3.11.8 3.3.11.9 3.3.11.12 3.3.11.13 3.3.11.15 3.3.11.16
3.3.11.18 3.3.11.19 3.3.11.20 3.3.11.23 3.3.11.24 3.3.11.25
3.3.11.28 3.3.11.29 3.3.11.30 3.3.11.31 3.3.11.32 3.3.11.34
3.3.11.36 3.3.11.39 3.3.11.40 3.3.11.41 3.3.11.42 3.3.14.2
3.3.14.3 3.3.14.7 3.3.14.8 3.3.14.9 3.3.14.10 3.3.14.16
3.3.14.19 3.3.14.20 4.11.7 4.11.10
2Overview
- Interpersonal Relations
- Pre-job preparation
- Area controls
- work Coverage
- Duties and Responsibilities
- General controls
3Overview
- Special Considerations
- Airborne Radioactivity
- Airborne Controls
- Airborne Monitoring
- Protective Clothing
- Respiratory Protection
- Dosimetry
4Overview
- Work Documents
- Radioactive Material Handling
- Radioactive Waste
- Shipping Radioactive Material
5Interpersonal Relations
- Interpersonal Relations
- Book Report Dale Carnegie How to Win Friends and
Influence People
6Interpersonal Relations
- Discuss and demonstrate the interpersonal skills
required for successful performance of duties in
the following situations - Job coverage
- Control Point
- Control Point
- Satellite control point
- Dealing with problems during work coverage
7Pre-Job Preparation
- Evaluate the use of temporary shielding for
specific jobs applications. - Shielding for different radiation types
- Alpha
- Paper
- Layer of dead skin
8Pre-Job Preparation
- Beta
- Low Z-number material
- Plastic
- Aluminum
9Pre-Job Preparation
- Gamma
- High Z-Number material
- Lead
- Steel
- Depleted Uranium
10Pre-Job Preparation
- Neutron
- Hydrogenous material
- Water
- Oil
- Neutron absorbers
- Boron
- Borated materials
11Pre-Job Preparation
- Scenario
- Job QA walkthrough and inspection of area
housekeeping and cleanliness. Includes inspection
of several rooms including one room posted High
Radiation Area. The inspection of the valve room
is expected to take less than five minutes.
12Pre-Job Preparation
- Room Remotely operated valve in the middle of an
8x8 room has a contact dose rate of 500
mrem/hour and a 30-cm dose rate of 150 mrem/hour.
13Pre-Job Preparation
- Should we consider shielding the valve for the
inspection? - Why or why not?
14Homework
15(No Transcript)
16Pre-Job Preparation
- Job Disassemble pump in a High Radiation Area
pump room. At any given time there will be up to
five people in the room. The job is expected to
take approximately two weeks from start to
finish, with approximately 400 man-hours spent in
the room.
17Pre-Job Preparation
- Room contains four pumps and associated piping.
Several hot spots from 300 mrem/hour to 2000
mrem/hour.
18Pre-Job Preparation
- Should we consider shielding the hot spots?
- What factors need to be considered?
19Pre-Job Preparation
- Considerations
- Structural strength of the piping where shielding
will be hung - Do we shield all the hot spots?
- Just the hottest ones?
- Just the ones closest to the work?
- Is shadow shielding possible?
- Are there other methods for reducing exposure
that might work for this evolution?
20Pre-Job Preparation
- Describe the in-process radiological surveys to
be performed under various radiological
conditions, including radiation surveys,
contamination surveys, and airborne radioactivity
surveys.
21Radiation Surveys
- Radiation surveys
- Establishing area conditions and low-dose standby
areas - Movement of sources
- Concentration of sources
- Operating valves
- Entry into previously unsurveyed areas
22Where to Survey
- Components being worked on
- Nearby piping and components
- Locations where workers are positioned
- Path to and from the work site
- Low dose areas
- Hot spots
- Potentially transient dose rate areas (resin
lines, drain lines, movement of sources).
23(No Transcript)
24Contamination Surveys
- Opening systems
- Exposing surfaces
- Entering unsurveyed areas
25Where to Survey
- Surfaces being worked on
- Nearby piping and components
- Locations where workers are positioned
- Path to and from the work site
- Newly exposed surfaces
- Potentially contaminated surfaces
26Air Sampling
- Work in high contamination
- Work with the potential to cause airborne
radioactivity - Other work in the area or plant conditions may
cause airborne radioactivity - Verification (Negative data)
27Where to Survey
- Breathing zone
- Downwind of source
- General area
- Outside of posted area to verify posting
28UnexpectedLevels
- Higher than expected dose rates
- Higher than expected contamination levels
29What do you do?
- Reevaluate
- Dosimetry
- Controls
- Shielding
- Survey frequencies
- PPE requirements
30What Else?
- Review available dose of crew
- Consider stopping the job
- May need a new RWP
- Resurvey with a different instrument
31Context
32Area Controls
- Discuss proper job coverage and radiological
protection measures for high-exposure jobs and
potential high-exposure jobs, such as the
following
33Area Controls
- Steam generator maintenance (PWR)
- Reactor coolant pump seal replacement (PWR)
- Reactor water cleanup pump maintenance (BWR)
- Recirculation pump seal replacement (BWR)
34Area Controls
- Reactor internal pump maintenance (ABWR)
- Control rod driver maintenance (BWR and ABWR)
- Diving operations
- Spent resin transfer operations
35Area Controls
- Spent fuel movements
- In-core detector maintenance
- Work in or around the spent fuel pool
36Area Controls
- Describe actions required when personnel leave a
work site upon completion of radiological work,
such as
37Area Controls
- Packaging, marking, and transferring contaminated
tools, equipment, and trash - Removing protective clothing
- Monitoring for contamination
- Returning special dosimetry
- Signing out of the RWP
- Notifying radiological protections personnel of
job completion
38Context
39Work Coverage
- Discuss plant access control procedures for entry
into the following for the performance of work
40Work Coverage
- Controlled Area
- Radiological Restricted Area
- Restricted Area
- Radiation Area
41Work Coverage
- High radiation area
- Very high radiation area
- Contaminated area
- Airborne radioactivity area
42Work Coverage
- Discuss requirements for conducting prejob
briefings for radiological work - Include discussion of the following
43Work Coverage
- When are briefings required
- Frequency of briefings for ongoing work
- Required attendance (who has to be there?)
- Items to be dicussed
- Importance of resolving all questions
44Work Coverage
- Explain actions to be taken if work scope changes
from RWP.
45Work Coverage
- Explain actions to be taken if work location
differs from RWP.
46Work Coverage
- Explain the importance of Stop Work Authority.
- Describe the appropriate use of Stop Work
Authority
47Context
48Duties and Responsibilities
- Describe the methods used to invoke radiological
protection requirements, such as
49Duties and Responsibilities
- Steps in written procedures
- Radiation work permits
- Verbal instructions from the supervisor
- Verbal instruction from radiological protection
personnel.
50Duties and Responsibilities
- Explain the responsibilities of the following
personnel regarding specifying, complying with,
monitoring, and enforcing radiological protection
and ALARA requirements
51Duties and Responsibilities
- Worker
- Worker Supervisor
- Radiological Protection Technician
- RPT Supervisor
52Duties and Responsibilities
- Discuss the conditions under which each of the
following is to be invoked during radiological
work
53Duties and Responsibilities
- Continuous RPT coverage
- Intermittent RP technician coverage
- RP technician present at start of job
- No RP technician coverage
- Advanced radiation worker coverage
54General Controls
- Identify the pre-job radiological survey
requirements for the work operation to be
performed. Based on the results of the pre-job
surveys and the scope of work, identify or
evaluate the need for the following
55General Controls
- Formal ALARA review
- Pre-job briefing
- Dosimetry placement
- Protective clothing
- Respiratory protection
56General Controls
- Special controls for
- Contamination control
- Exposure reduction
- Airborne
- Continuous coverage
- In-process surveys
- Radiological hold points
57General Controls
- Describe precations to control airborne
radioactivity - Special ventilation
- Containment devices
- Area decontamination
- Work underwater, or keep surface wet
58General Controls
- Describe precautions to be used to minimize the
spread of radioactive contamination - Containment devices
- Protective clothing
- Disposable coverings in job site preparation
59General Controls
- Describe special precautions to control or reduce
exposures, such as - Use of stay times and timekeepers
- Continuous coverage
- Alarming dosimeters or dose rate meters
- Temporary shielding
- Low dose waiting areas
- Removal of sources
60Airborne Radioactivity
- Identify the isotopes of primary concern for
airborne radioactivity - H3, Co-58, Co-60, Cs-134, Cs-137, I-131
61Airborne Radioactivity
- Describe the Requirements for posting airborne
radioactivity areas (10CFR20) - Explain the differences between different types
of airborne radioactivity (particulate, iodine,
tritium and noble gases) - Explain the differences in monitoring different
types of airborne radioactivity
62Airborne Radioactivity
- Describe the method for determining the derived
air concentration (DAC), DAC-hours, and annual
limit on intake (ALI) for a worker in an airborne
radioactivity area.
63Airborne Controls
- Identify work situations and practices that could
produce airborne radioactivity, such as - Opening a contaminated system
- Working in highly contaminated areas
- Cutting, grinding, or welding on contaminated
surfaces - Leaks from contaminated systems
64Airborne Controls
- Describe controls that can reduce exposure to
airborne radioactivity - Filtered ventilation
- Decontamination
- Containment devices
- Repair leaks
- Work under water or keep work wet
- Respirator (last resort)
65Airborne Monitoring
- Explain the difference between low-volume,
high-volume, and lapel air samples. - Explain how and when each is used.
66Airborne Monitoring
- Discuss the differences between paper filters and
charcoal filters and when each is used. - Discuss the purpose of using a continuous air
monitor and identify situation in which
continuous air monitors are to be used - Evaluate trends in airborne radioactivity based
on sampling results
67Airborne Monitoring
- Discuss methods for tracking exposure to airborne
radioactivity, including - Levels at which monitoring is required
- Sampling requirements
- Use of protection factors
- Documentation of exposure,
- Timekeeping
- Reporting and summing exposures
68Context
69Protective Clothing
- Identify and explain the factors determining the
need for and type of protective clothing - Contamination levels
- Position of the worker
- Presence of airborne radioactivity
- Presence of liquid
- Type of work
- Environmental conditions and total risk.
70Protective Clothing
- Identify measures to take when protective
clothing is used in conditions that could result
in heat stress.
71Respiratory Protection
- Define protection factor (10CFR20)
72Respiratory Protection
- Identify the protection factors, advantages and
disadvantages of the following respirators - Full-face Negative Pressure
- Full-face positive pressure
- Full-face-airline
- Airline (bubble) hood respirator
- Self-contained breathing apparatus
73Respiratory Protection
- Identify requirements and individual must meet
before being issued a respirator - Training
- Physical examination
- Quantitative fit test
74Respiratory Protection
- Describe conditions under which each type of
respiratory protection must be used - Oxygen deficiency?
- IDLH?
75Respiratory Protection
- Identify and explain the factors that determine
the need for and type of respiratory equipment to
be used during radiological work such as
76Respiratory Protection
- Airborne levels
- Type of airborne radioactivity
- Contamination levels
- Wet or dry?
- Protection factor
- Duration of the job
77Respiratory Protection
- Type of work being performed (welding, grinding,
cutting) - The impact of decreased worker efficiency,
resulting in increased whole body exposure - Applicability of portable ventilation instead of
respirators
78Communication
79Dosimetry
- Explain how the type and location of whole-body
dosimetry is determined for body position and
dose rate gradient
80Dosimetry
- Identify the criteria used to determine tha need
for multiple badging or for extremity monitoring - Discuss the use of lapel air samples
81Work Documents
- Explain the purpose of radiation work permits
(RWP) - Explain the difference between standing and
job-specific RWPs
82Work Documents
- Identify the information to be included on an
RWP, such as - Scope of work
- Radiological conditions
- Dose action levels
- Hot spots
- Authorized personnel
- Dosimetry requirements
83Work Documents
- Respiratory protection requirements
- Protective clothing requirements
- RWP expiration date
- Radiological coverage and notifications
- Special precautions, limitations and restrictions
84Work Documents
- Explain the purpose of having each worker read
and sign the RWP - Demonstrate actions that should be taken if
radiological conditions at the job site are
significantly different from those shown on the
RWP
85Communication
86Radioactive Material Handling
- Identify the packaging, marking and labeling
requirements for storing radioactive materials.
87Radioactive Material Handling
- Identify NRC-licensed radioactive materials that
require special controls, and discuss the
controls required - Describe the approval and posting requirements
for radioactive material areas and radioactive
material storage areas.
88Radioactive Material Handling
- Identify special precautions and restrictions for
storing radioactive materials outdoors.
89Radioactive Material Handling
- Describe the controls over radioactive effluent
releases, including - Liquid and gaseous radioactivity release paths
- Radiation monitors to detect and measure releases
- Procedure controls and records associated with
releases - Use of DAC and technical specification (tech
spec) limits - Radiological environmental tech specs
90Radioactive Waste
- Describe plant systems for storing and processing
radioactive liquid waste - Explain the radiological protection requirements
associated with processing liquid wastes using
91Radioactive Waste
- Explain the radiological protection requirements
associated with processing liquid wastes using - Evaporators
- Solidification of evaporated bottoms
- Transfer of demineralizer resin to shipping casks
- Dewatering and solidification of resins
92Radioactive Waste
- Describe the radiological protection requirements
for operating a radioactive waste compactor
93Radioactive Waste
- Identify and explain techniques for reducing the
volume of radioactive solid waste generated, such
as
94Radioactive Waste
- Minimize material entering radiological areas
- Decontamination
- Segregating non-radioactive waste
- Reuse cloth rags, shoe covers, bags, PCs
- Compaction
- Hot Tool Room
- Remove packing materials outside the
radiologically restricted area
95Shipping Radioactive Material
- Identify regulations and procedures for shipping
and receiving radioactive materials
96Shipping Radioactive Material
- Define the following terms related to shipping
radioactive material - Type A and Type B
- Low Specific Activity
- Limited Quantity
- Exempt Quantity
- Special Form and Normal Form
97Shipping Radioactive Material
- Discuss regulatory limits for radiation levels
and contamination levels for packages and
vehicles while in transit.