Title :
Processing of materials and waste streams by electron and ion beams
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mater. & Nucl. Eng., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The use of electron beams on an industrial scale is well-established. Some 700 accelerators with electron energies ranging from 0.12 to 16 MeV are producing a wide range of products (none of which are radioactive) based largely on polymer crosslinking, sterilization of biomedical supplies and curing of coatings. Of the three categories, only the last involves major energy savings. The main benefits associated with the other two categories are product properties not readily obtained by competitive methods. When compared with canning and refrigeration, radiation preservation of food (as yet to be adopted on a wide scale), offers prospects of enormous energy savings. Radiation treatment of sewage sludge and waste water have had some minor triumphs. Simultaneous removal of NO/sub x/ and SO/sub x/ from flue gases by electron irradiation has been demonstrated; the potential market for powerful accelerators required for this field is many hundreds. A wide range of environmental problems ranging from organic chlorides in drinking water to military wastes (biological, nuclear and chemical) are the subject of research programs based on electron processing. Attention is also directed to the recent development of several ingenious products based on high energy ion beams (>10 MeV/nucleon) including "smart" porous membranes and organic nonlinear optical devices.
Keywords :
electron beam applications; environmental factors; ion beam applications; materials preparation; 0.12 to 16 MeV; biomedical supplies; curing; drinking water; electron beams; electron energies; electron processing; energy savings; environmental problems; flue gases; high energy ion beams; industrial scale; ion beams; material processing; military wastes; organic nonlinear optical devices; polymer crosslinking; porous membranes; radiation preservation; radiation treatment; sewage sludge; waste streams; waste water; Canning; Coatings; Curing; Electron accelerators; Electron beams; Ion accelerators; Ion beams; Polymer films; Radioactive materials; Waste materials;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 1995. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts., 1995 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Madison, WI, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2669-5
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.1995.533500