Science Inventory

External Dose to Recovery Teams Following a Wide-Area Nuclear or Radiological Release Event

Citation:

Kaminski, M., K. Sanders, K. Hepler, M. Magnuson, AND J. Slagley. External Dose to Recovery Teams Following a Wide-Area Nuclear or Radiological Release Event. HEALTH PHYSICS. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, PA, 120(6):591-599, (2021). https://doi.org/10.1097/HP.0000000000001381

Impact/Purpose:

A common radionuclide 137Cs is a gamma-ray source term for nuclear reactor accidents, nuclear detonations, and potential radionuclide dispersal devices. For wide-area contamination events, one remediation option integrates water wash down activities with on-site treatment of water for its immediate reuse. This remediation option includes washing building and roadways via firehose, collecting the wash water, and passing the contaminated water through chemical filtration beds. METHODS: MicroShield® was employed to calculate the dose to workers at the roadway level and to calculate total dose rates while performing wash down activities. RESULTS: This study finds that for a realistic contamination scenario for a wide-area of a large urban environment, decontamination crews would be subjected to <220 μSv per person, much less than the 50,000 μSv limit for occupational dose. By extrapolation, one decontamination team of 48 people could continue wash down operations on a total of 2.8 km2 before reaching their incurred annual dose limits.

Description:

The primary objective of this study was to quantify the dose incurred to workers performing a remediation recovery effort for roadways and buildings following a wide-area release event.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:06/01/2021
Record Last Revised:08/10/2023
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 358329