Title: Packaging
1Packaging
- Types of radioactive material packaging
- Industrial packaging
- Type A
- Type B
2Normal and Special Forms
Normal Form Special Form
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12Pig tail
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14Soil Moisture Density Gage
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16Placards, Labels
- White 1
- Yellow II
- Yellow III
- Transport Index T.I.
17Radioactive White ISurface Reading .5 mr/hr
7
18White I
19Transport Index
- Measured at one meter from the surface of a
package (this is a unit-less number)
20Radioactive Yellow IISurface 50mr/hr At 1 meter
1mr/hr
21Radioactive Yellow IIISurface 200mr/hrAt 1
meter 10mr/hrExclusive use 1000mr/hr surface
200mr/hr vehicle surface 10mr/hr two meters
away
22Radioactive Placard
- Vehicles carrying packages bearing Rad III labels
are required to post the placard shown below on
the outside of the vehicle.
23Information Sources
- Package markings present the items shipping name
and U.N. identification number. - Emergency Response Guide.
24Information Sources
- Shipping papers provide
- The same information as the package label and
markings - Physical and chemical form
- Hazard class
- Identification number
25Common Sources
- RadiopharmaceuticalsUsed for therapeutic or
diagnostic use in humansMost are shipped in
single dosesGenerally considered a contamination
hazard as opposed to a exposure risk
26Common Sources, continued Examples of
radiopharmaceuticals
27Common Sources, continued
- Industrial GaugesSoil moisture/density
gauges-used to determine suitability of roadbeds.
Small sources.Radiography cameras-used to
identify flaws in welds, castings, pipe, etc.
Large, dangerous sources
28Common Sources, continuedExamples of industrial
gauges
29Common Sources, continued
- Waste Shipments from hospitals, universities,
laboratories, research facilities, and nuclear
power plants. Generally shipped as Radioactive
LSA (Low Specific Activity).
30Common Sources, continued
- Nuclear power plant waste shipment
31Forms of RAM
32Packaging
- Generally there are three types of
packagesStrong, tight packages-Low
concentrations of RAM uniformly distributed.
33Packaging, continued
- Type A packages- Most common package used. This
package, with its radioactive contents, meets
general DOT requirements and will retain its
shielding and integrity during normal
transportation.
34Packaging, continued
Type A containers
35Packaging, continued
- Type B Packaging-Very strong packages used to
ship amounts of RAM that could be hazardous to
people and the environment. Must meet stringent
tests for fire, physical damage and water
immersion.
36Packaging, continued
37Package Labels
38Package Labels, continued
39Package Markings
40Vehicle Placards
- Highway Route Controlled Quantity
41Shipping Documents
- Shipping Papers-Required for all HM in
transportation must accompany the HM. Provides a
description of the material. Must include a
shippers declaration that the package has been
properly prepared. Called Bill of Lading,
Shippers Certificate, or Declaration of
Dangerous Goods
42Shipping Papers, continued
- Emergency Response Information-Required for all
HM. Must accompany shipping papers. Provides
first responders with information on how to
handle an accident involving the package. Must be
immediately accessible and must include an
emergency response phone number.
43Objectives
- Determine if material is Hazardous Material
(HAZMAT). - Understand HAZMAT employee training requirements.
- Identify different regulatory agencies.
- Understand the relationship between regulatory
agencies.
44History
- Approximately 50 years of safely shipping RAM.
- 5 million packages annually.
- No deaths or serious illness.
- 1st regulations by US Postal Services to protect
film.
45What Is HazardousMaterial?
46ExplosivesFlammable
Most explosives, flammable liquids and flammable
gasses are classified as hazardous material
47HAZMAT Also Includes
- Poisons.
- Oxidizers.
- Acids.
- Infectious waste.
48And The ReasonYou Are Here
- Radioactive Material (RAM) is also HAZMAT.
49What Does the 7 Mean?
- HAZMAT is divided into nine hazard classes (some
contain sub classes like 5.1). - Radioactive material is number 7, referred to as
class 7 (radioactive).
50Why Does RAM HAZMAT?
- Radioactive material is listed as hazmat in 49
CFR 172.101. - 49 CFR 173.403 states, radioactive material is
any material having a specific activity greater
than 70 Bq/g (0.002 ?Ci/g).
51Required HAZMAT Training(49CFR172.704)
- Who needs it?
- Any employee who
- Operates vehicle transporting HM.
- Loads, unloads or handles HM.
- Tests, repairs, marks HM packages.
- Represents package as qualified for HM.
- Responsible for safety during transport of HM.
52Training Content
- General awareness.
- Function specific (blocking/bracing).
- Safety training (not required for all personnel
just HAZMAT handlers).
53Periodicity
- Initially within 90 days after employment or
change of job. - At least once every 3 years.
- No minimum length.
- It is the employers responsibility to ensure
training is adequate.
54Training Records
- Maintain current training, inclusive of previous
3 years, While employed and 90 days after
employment - MUST include
- Name of trainee.
- Most recent completion date.
- Description of training.
55Training Records (Cont.)
- MUST include
- Name address of trainer.
- Certification that employee was trained tested
(oral, written or observation).
56NRC Requirements
- 10 CFR
- 19.12 instruction to workers.
- 71.5 requires compliance with 49 CFR 170 through
189.
57NRC Requirements
- NOTE Training records retention is usually the
duration of employment and three years after
leaving.
58Who Makes the Rules?
- Department of transportation (DOT) 49 CFR.
- Nuclear regulatory comm. (NRC) 10 CFR.
- U.S. Post office (USPS) 39 CFR.
- International atomic energy agency (IAEA).
59Who Makes the Rules?
- International Air Transport Association (IATA)
- International Maritime Consult. Org. (IMCO)
- Individual states.
- Bridge and toll road authorities.
60Resp. Of Agencies
- Department of Trans., 49 CFR
- Regulates type A, LSA and industrial packaging.
- Regulates ALL modes of transportation in
interstate commerce (except USPS). - Issues cert. Of competent authority for
international shipments.
61Resp. of Agencies (Cont.)
- Nuclear Regulatory Comm.
- 10 CFR
- Regulates packaging type B quantities and fissile
material (standards procedures). - Investigates trans. Accidents and incidents
involving RAM.
62Resp. of Agencies (Cont.)
- Nuclear Regulatory Comm.
- 10 CFR
- Issues Certificates of Compliance for type B
packaging. - Regulates licensee compliance with DOT
regulations.
63Resp. Of Agencies (Cont.)
- United States Postal Serv., 39 CFR
- Has authority over postal shipments.
- Any DOT labeled packages (white-I, yellow II and
III) are NOT mailable. - Content must be not more than one-tenth of DOT
limits listed in 49 CFR 173.425 table 7.
64Resp. Of Agencies (Cont.)
- International Atomic Energy Agency
- A UN agency that develops recommendations for
safe transportation of RAM. - Issues IAEA safety series (1996 safety series no.
6 is most recent). - U.S. Is not in complete conformance (DOT Regs
1985 safety series no. 6).
65Resp. Of Agencies (Cont.)
- International Civil Aviation Org.
- A UN agency that provides tech. Instruction for
safe transportation of hazmat by air (includes
RAM).
66Resp. Of Agencies (Cont.)
- International Air Transport Assoc.
- A body of member air carriers who publish Regs
for safe trans. of HAZMAT by air. - Compliance is mandatory for member carriers.
67Resp. Of Agencies (Cont.)
- International Maritime Consultative
- Organization
- A body of member carriers who publish Regs for
safe transportation of HAZMAT by vessel. - Compliance is mandatory for member carriers.
68The DOT and NRC
- DOT is responsible for HM shipments.
- NRC says DOT rules apply even if shipment is not
in commerce. - NRC has written shipping Regs to comply with DOT
Regs for type B shipments.
69The DOT and ICAO
- HM may be transported per international civil
aviation organization technical instructions
(ICAO TI) before or after transport by aircraft
if packaged, marked, classified, described and
certified on shipping papers as required by ICAO
TI.
70DOT and International Agencies
- Follow IAEA safety series no. 6. DOT basically
adapts IAEA regulations but is only in full
compliance with 1985 edition.
71DOT and State / Local Auth.
- States may make their own rules
- provided
- It is possible to comply with both the state
rules and DOT rules. - The rules are not an obstacle to accomplishment
and execution of the regulations.
72DOT and Tunnels
- DOT has no regulations specific to tunnels.
- States are responsible for tunnel regulations.
- Some states limit access to tunnels when carrying
RAM. - Restrictions usually pertain to activity, TI,
size and weight.
73Summary
- Shipping has proven to be relatively safe.
- A single shipment may fall under several
different agencies regulations. - Radioactive material is HM per 49 CFR.
- HM employees require specific training.
74Summary
- HM training must be tested, documented and
certified. - NRC can will inspect shipping of radioactive
material.
75Transportation of Radioactive Material
76Objectives
- Identify the seven steps for shipping radioactive
material - Classification.
- Packaging.
- Marking.
- Labeling.
- Shipping papers.
- Placarding.
- Carriage.
77Objectives
- Understand the procedure for completing steps one
and two of the seven steps.
78Step One - Classification
- Is the material regulated? (173.403).
- Specific activity gt0.002 ?Ci/g.
- All RAM is listed on table 173.435.
- Is the shipment outside of a restricted access
installation? - If YES then 49 CFR applies.
79Containment
- Containment type
- Is the item special form or normal form?
- Look at 173.403.
80Special Form (173.403)
- Class 7 material which
- Is a single solid piece or contained in a sealed
capsule, must be destroyed to open. - Is at least one dimension not less than 5
millimeters (0.2 inches). - Meets test requirements of 173.469.
81Test Requirements (173.469)
- Pass a impact, percussion and bend test.
- Withstand a heat test (1475? F) for ten minutes.
- Must not leak when subjected to a leach test.
82Normal Form
- Any class 7 material not classified as special
form is normal form!
83Quantity (Type A)
- Type A packaging is the weaker packaging (cheaper
too). - To be able to use type A packaging for special
form, the quantity may not exceed the A1 value. - To be able to use type A packaging for normal
form, the quantity may not exceed the A2value.
84Quantity (Type B)
- Type B packaging is the stronger packaging (more
expensive). - Type B packaging is required if the special form
quantity exceeds the A1 value. - Type B packaging is required if the normal form
quantity exceeds the A2 value.
85Example 1
- A plastic check source 1079 Ci of cadmium-109
(CD-109). - Is it special form?
- No, will not pass heat test.
86Example 1 (Cont)
- A plastic check source 1079 Ci of cadmium-109
(CD-109). - Does it exceed A2 value? (173.435)
- Yes
87Example 1 (Cont)
- A plastic check source 1079 Ci of cadmium-109
(CD-109). - The material is normal form and exceeds the A2
quantity therefore it requires type B packaging.
88Multiple Sources (Sum of Fractions (173.433(d)))
- Now suppose we have two or more sources
(different isotopes) in the same package? - What do we do????
- Take the early retirement option?
- Or
89Multiple Sources (Sum of Fractions (173.433(d)))
- For each source take the activity divided by the
A1 (or A2)value of that source. - Then add your answers.
- If the SUM exceeds 1 (one) you must use type B
packaging.
90Example 2
- Normal form commodity sources.
- Look up the A2 value in 49 CFR 173.435.
91Example 2
- Enter the A2 value and divide the activity by the
A2 value.
92Example 2
- Enter the A2 value and divide the activity by the
A2 value.
93Example 2
- Enter the A2 value and divide the activity by the
A2 value.
94Example 2
- Enter the A2 value and divide the activity by the
A2 value.
95Example 2
- Using the sum of fractions method as shown in 49
CFR 173.433 we see the combined limit exceeds
1. - Therefore a type B package is required.
96Highway Controlled Route (HRC)
- The amount of radioactive material is great
enough that you are required to obtain a route
from the appropriate state DOT. - How much is that?
97HRC Limits
- 3000 times A1 or A2
- Or
- 1000 TBq (27,000 Ci)
- Whichever is smaller.
98HRC Quantity
- Always requires a radioactive yellow III.
- Always an exclusive use shipment.
99HRC Quantity Example
- A type B package with 105 Ci of iridium-192, is
this an HRC quantity? - 1st - what is the A1 value from 49 CFR 173.435
(pg. 578). - A1 27
100HRC Quantity Example
- 2nd - multiply 27 Ci X 3000 81000 Ci
- Does 105 Ci exceed 81,000 OR 27,000?
- No
- Then this package IS NOT an HRC quantity.
101Limited Quantities
- Exception for limited quantities of RAM
(173.421). - Does not have to follow all the packaging,
labeling, etc. - Can not be a hazardous substance or hazardous
waste. - Determined by the activity not the physical size
(not more than allowed by 173.425).
102Limited Quantities (Example)
- An IM-231A, RSO-5 RADIAC box contains 8 ?Ci of
Cs-137 in normal form. - Table 7 says you must not exceed 10-3 A2 value to
be limited quantity. - The A2 value is 13.5 Ci.
- Then 13.5 Ci X 10-3 0.0135 Ci.
- Our source in the units of ?Ci
- 8 ?Ci 0.000008 Ci.
103Instruments and Articles
- Manufactured item containing a radioactive source
as a component part. (Could include RADIACs,
XRFs, etc). - Rad level at 4 inch. lt 10 mR/hr for each article.
- lt Table VII limits, 49 CFR 173.425.
104Instruments or Articles (Example)
- An IM-125D, (AN/PDR-43) RADIAC contains 80 ?Ci of
Kr-85 in normal form. - Table 7 says you must not exceed 10-2 A2 value to
be limited quantity. - The A2 value is 270 Ci.
- Then 270 Ci x 10-2 2.70 Ci.
- Our source in the units of ?Ci
- 80 ?Ci 0.00008 Ci.
105Low Specific Activity (LSA)
- LSA-I
- Solid material only.
- Naturally occurring LSA materials.
- Unirradiated or depleted uranium.
- Non fissile material with unlimited A2 values.
- Mill tailings, etc. Uniformly distributed with
avg. spec. activity lt 10-6 A2/g.
106LSA (Cont.)
- LSA-II
- Includes liquids, solids may be up to 100 times
the activity of LSA-I. - Water with tritium concentrations up to 0.8 TBq/l
(20 Ci/l). - Material that is uniformly distributed with avg.
spec. activity lt 10-4 A2/g for solids and gases,
and 10-5 A2/g for liquids.
107LSA (Cont.)
- LSA-III
- Liquid must be solidified and solids may be up to
10 times the activity of LSA-II. - RAM distributed uniformly in a solid or
collection of solids And - Is relatively insoluble so that if submerged for
seven days it would not leach in excess of 0.1
A2 And
108LSA (Cont.)
- LSA-III (cont.)
- Average spec. activity lt 2 x 10-3 A2/g.
- REQUIRES TESTING FOR PROOF OF LEACHING.
109Surface Contaminated Object
- An item that is not radioactive but has RAM
contamination on any of its surfaces. - Divided into two groups
- SCO-I
- SCO-II
110SCO-I
- Limits may not exceed (averaged over 300 cm2 of
accessible area) - Non fixed contamination limits
- 4 Bq/cm2 (10-4 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and low
toxicity alpha emitters. - 0.4 Bq/cm2 (10-5 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
111SCO-I (Cont.)
- Fixed contamination limits
- 4 x 104 Bq/cm2 (1.0 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and
low toxicity alpha emitters. - 4 x 103 Bq/cm2 (0.1 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
112SCO-I (Cont.)
- Non-fixed plus the fixed contamination limits on
inaccessible surfaces - 4 x 104 Bq/cm2 (1.0 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and
low toxicity alpha emitters. - 4 x 103 Bq/cm2 (0.1 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
113SCO-II
- Limits are greater than SCO-I but may not exceed
(averaged over 300 cm2 of accessible area) - Non fixed contamination limits
- 400 Bq/cm2 (10-2 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and low
toxicity alpha emitters. - 40 Bq/cm2 (10-3 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
114SCO-II (Cont.)
- Fixed contamination limits
- 4 x 104 Bq/cm2 (1.0 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and
low toxicity alpha emitters. - 4 x 103 Bq/cm2 (0.1 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
115SCO-II (Cont.)
- Non-fixed plus the fixed contamination limits on
inaccessible surfaces - 8 x 105 Bq/cm2 (20 ?Ci/cm2) beta and gamma and
low toxicity alpha emitters. - 8 x 104 Bq/cm2 (2 ?Ci/cm2) alpha emitters.
116Step Two - Packaging
- Package or packaging
- Packaging - ALL packaging without RAM.
- Package - packaging plus RAM.
Package
Packaging Radioactive
Material
117Packaging Specifications
- Type A or type B package
- Type A packaging is designed to maintain
integrity during normal transport. - Type B packaging is designed to maintain
integrity during normal transport and
hypothetical accidents.
118The Transport Activity Spectrum
Limited QuantitiesAccepted Articles
Highway Route Controlled Quantity
Type B Quantities
Type A Quantities
Not Regulated in Transport
Type A Packaging
Excepted Packaging
Type B Packaging
3,000 A1or3,000 A2or27,000 Ci(Whicheveris
Least)
0.002 ?Ci/g
A1 or A2
10-3 A1 Solids 10-3 A2 Solids 10-4 A2 Solids
119General Requirements
- Easily handled
- 22-50 kilograms require means for manual
handling. - Greater than 50 kilograms needs mechanical means.
- Easily decontaminated, no protrusions, pockets,
etc.
120General Req. (Cont.)
- Good strength, compatible material.
- Means to prevent escape of RAM through valves,
etc. - For air travel the following restrictions apply
- Not more than 122 deg. F external temp at 100
deg. F ambient. - Maintains integrity from -40 - 131 deg. F.
- Pressure tested to at least 13.8 lb./in2.
121Type A Specific Requirements
- Listed in 49 CFR 173.410, includes
- Minimum dimension 10 cm (4 in).
- Need for tamper seals.
- Contain absorbents or leak proof for liquids.
122Type A Test Requirements
- Water spray test.
- Similar to 2 inches per hour for one hour.
- Free drop test On an ungiving surface.
- Height dependant on weight.
- Boxes and drums require additional test on
corners/seams.
123Type A Test Req. (Cont.)
- Compression test.
- 5x weight of actual package or 265 lb./in2 on two
opposite sides. One side may be the bottom. - Penetration test.
- Drop a 1-1/4 inch, 13.2 lb., bar 1 meter.
124Radiation Level Limits
- Normal shipments
- 200 mrem/hr on surface.
- 10 mrem/hr at 1 meter (max TI10)
- Exclusive use
- gt 200 mrem/hr on surface.
- lt1000 mrem/hr on surface with restrictions.
- No air transport.
125Contamination Limits
- lt 2.2 dpm/cm2 alpha.
- lt 22 dpm/cm2 beta-gamma.
- Swipe area is to be representative of a 300 cm2.
This may be 3, 100 cm2 areas. 100 cm2 is roughly
4 inch by 4 inch.
126Summary
- Seven steps for shipping RAM
- Step one - classification
- Containment
- Quantity
- A1 and A2 quantity
- Type B quantity
127Summary (Cont.)
- Step one - classification (cont)
- Highway controlled route
- Limited quantity
- Instruments and articles
- Low specific activity
- Surface contaminated object
128Summary (Cont.)
- Step two - packaging
- Package design
- Test requirements
- Radiation levels
- Contamination limits
129AnyQuestions?