Title :
Radioactivity, Shielding, Radiation Damage, and Remote Handling
Author :
Wilson, Mahlon T.
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, University of California Los Alamos, New Mexico 87544
fDate :
6/1/1975 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Proton beams of a few hundred million electron volts of energy are capable of inducing hundreds of curies of activity per microampere of beam intensity into the materials they intercept. This adds a new dimension to the parameters that must be considered when designing and operating a high-intensity accelerator facility. Large investments must be made in shielding. The shielding itself may become activated and require special considerations as to its composition, location, and method of handling. Equipment must be designed to withstand large radiation dosages. Items such as vacuum seals, water tubing, and electrical insulation must be fabricated from radiation-resistant materials. Methods of maintaining and replacing equipment are required that limit the radiation dosages to workers. The high-intensity facilities of LAMPF, SIN, and TRIUMF and the high-energy facility of FERMILAB have each evolved a philosophy of radiation handling that matches their particular machine and physical plant layouts. Special tooling, commercial manipulator systems, remote viewing, and other techniques of the hot cell and fission reactor realms are finding application within accelerator facilities.
Keywords :
Dielectrics and electrical insulation; Electron beams; Investments; Particle beams; Proton accelerators; Radiation dosage; Radioactive materials; Remote handling; Sealing materials; Seals;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.1975.4327804