[ RadSafe ] Texas LLRW Site

John R Johnson idiasjrj at gmail.com
Fri Jul 13 18:22:04 CDT 2012


Jerry

Isn't it because it does not occur in "nature". If I-129 is present it must
be "man made" and likely an indication of other isotopes being made.
John
On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 3:38 PM, Jerry Cohen <jjc105 at yahoo.com> wrote:

>
>
> I wonder what makes I-129 a "radionuclide of interest". Its exceedingly
> long
> half-life makes it essentially a stable element, no different than the
> stable
> iodine that occurs naturally in most soils.
>
> Jerry Cohen
>
>
> Dear Radsafe,
>
>     From:    _jpreisig at aol.com_ (mailto:jpreisig at aol.com)    .
>
>
>     Hope you are all doing well.  HP  abstracts for the HP Society
> Meeting in Sacramento,
> California are out now, as a supplement to Health Physics magazine.
> Always interesting
> reading.  One item is on DU by Bob Cherry.
>
>     Operational Radiation Safety (another HPS journal)  has an article on
> Decommissioning of the
> Brookhaven Lab High Flux Beam reactor.  Fuel and spent fuel are  gone.
> Heavy Water is gone.
> Interesting reading.  I guess that's one way of totally stopping  the
> tritium leak source term.
> The offending leaking fuel storage pool was drained.  Goodbye.  Wonder
> what they'll do with the
> Brookhaven Medical Research Reactor.  I don't think there was anything
> wrong with it..
>
>     There's an abstract on the new Texas LLRW (Low Level  Radioactive
> Waste) facility and some
> modeling they did.  The radionuclides of interest are C-14, Tc-99,  I-129,
> possibly among others.
> I guess tritium is not that big a deal in such a facility, due to its short
> half-life.  These radionuclides
> are particularly mobile in the groundwater environment, as referred to in
> my earlier RADSAFE
> postings.  These Texas folks did some computer modelling and describe  what
> they did.  Wonder why
> they didn't just use Femwater-BLT (Suen and Sullivan???),  Lewater, Lewaste
> or similar computer
> codes.  Last I heard, Femwater-BLT was available for use on a personal
> computer.  It is or was
> available for a fee from the RSICC, the Radiation Shielding Information
> Center at Oak Ridge
> National Laboratory (USA).  Other Radiation computer codes are  available.
> Finally, if you see a computer
> code you are interested in, you can search it out on the internet, and then
> email the original
> programmers/designers for information on how to obtain such a computer
> code.  No big deal.
>
>     These newfangled small, modular reactors are also  addressed in an
> abstract.  Sounds like
> some of them will be deployed by the TVA, in the Tennessee Valley.
> Newfangled nuclear
> electricity for people/homes/businesses previously not on the electricity
> grid.
>
>     NJ Nuke plants and workers, thanks for the 50% of the  electricity (in
> NJ) that you are providing to
> air condition part of my home this summer!!!!  Take Care...
>
>     Regards,    Joseph R. (Joe) Preisig,  PhD
>
>
>
>
>
>
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> ________________________________
>
> From: "JPreisig at aol.com" <JPreisig at aol.com>
> To: radsafe at health.phys.iit.edu
> Sent: Thu, July 12, 2012 8:44:56 PM
> Subject: [ RadSafe ] Texas LLRW Site
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