Industrial Uses of Radiation & Radioactive Material
Industrial Uses of Radiation & Radioactive Material
Industrial Uses of Radiation & Radioactive Material
David C Howell
Radiation Safety Officer
Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center
Uses of Radiation
Americas advanced industrial economy
and high standard of living wouldnt be
possible without the use of radiation
and radioactive materials:
Medical
research
Medical diagnosis
& treatment
Uses of Radiation
Manufacturing
processes
Consumer
goods &
services
~20% of Americas
energy from
nuclear power
Economics
America derives substantial economic and
employment benefits from the use of
radiation and radioactive materials:
4,000,000 jobs
$330.7 billion
annually in total
industrial sales
Economics
Nuclear energys direct and indirect
economic impacts in the US:
442,000 jobs
$90 billion in
total sales of
goods & services
$17.8 billion in
local, state &
federal tax revenues
Origin
Some radioactive materials occur in
nature...
Destination
Once they are produced, they
are packaged and shipped
safely to users throughout
the United States; users are:
Universities
Hospitals
Laboratories
Industries
Medical Uses
One-third of the 30 million hospitalized
Americans are diagnosed or treated with
radionuclides (e.g., 99mTc, 67Ga, 111In and
131I)
Bone metastases
Medical Uses
Hyperthyroid conditions
in humans and cats can
be successfully treated
with radioiodine therapy
Medical Uses
More than 11 million nuclear
medicine procedures are
performed each year in the
United States
Scientific Research
The FDA requires that all new
drugs be tested for safety and
effectiveness; more than 80% are
tested with radioactive materials
Scientific Research
Archaeologists use 14C to date
artifacts containing plant or
animal material
Criminal investigators
use radiation to
examine evidence
Museums rely on
radioactive materials to
verify authenticity of art
objects and paintings
Industrial Uses
Automobile industry makes use
of isotopes to test the quality
of steel in cars
Industrial Uses
Oil gas & mining companies use
isotopes to map geological contours
(using test wells) and mine bores
and to determine presence of
hydrocarbons
Pipeline companies utilize
radioactive isotopes to look
for defects in welds
Agricultural Uses
Hardier and more disease resistant
crops (peanuts, tomatoes, onions,
rice, soybeans, barley) have been
developed using radioactive
materials in agricultural research
Nutritional value, baking and melting
qualities of some crops and cooking
times have been improved using
isotopes
Radioactive materials pinpoint
where illnesses strike animals to
breed disease-resistant livestock
Agricultural Uses
Radioactive materials show
how plants absorb fertilizer;
this helps researchers figure
where and how much to apply
to crops for maximum yield
Nuclear Power
David C Howell
Radiation Safety Officer
Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center
1941-42
December 1941: The United
States enters World War II
when Japan bombs Pearl Harbor
August 1942: The first pure
sample of plutonium was isolated
1942
November 1942: Los Alamos, NM
is selected as the site for the
US atomic bomb laboratory
1942-45
1942-45: Oak Ridge National Laboratory is
built in Oak Ridge, TN; plutonium production
begins
1943-45: Hanford Site is
built in Richland, WA;
first reactor begins
plutonium production in
September 1944
1945
July 16, 1945: US explodes
first atomic device near
Alamagordo, NM
Late 1940s-50s
1946: Oak Ridge ships first nuclear reactor
produced radioisotopes for civilian use to
the Barnard Cancer Hospital in St. Louis
1950s
1953: President Eisenhower
proposes joint international
cooperation to develop
peaceful applications of
nuclear energy in his Atoms
for Peace speech
January 1954: The first
nuclear powered submarine,
USS Nautilus, is launched;
was the first boat to visit
the North Pole; steamed
500,000 miles in 25 years
Kazakhstan
Russia
Canada
USA
China
Mongolia
Niger
Brazil
Australia
Namibia
South
Africa
World Dependence on
Nuclear Power
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US Nuclear Reactors
Chernobyl - 1986
A power surge, during a test to determine how long the turbines would
spin after a power loss, caused steam to lift the cover plate off the
reactor, and an intense fire spread fission products into the
atmosphere. This accident was caused by human error and a poorly
designed and engineered reactor. The accident caused the deaths of 30
power plant employees and firemen, while another 134 emergency
personnel experienced acute radiation sickness.
The Future?
1980 US population: 226,545,805
2000 US population: 281,421,906
Increase of 54,876,101 people (~24.2% change)
No new nuclear power plants have been
licensed or built since the early 1980s
Brownouts in California, increased electrical
usage in Silicon Valley, PCs, warmer summers
demand more A/C, etc.
Building gas turbine and fossil fuel plants;
limits on solar/hydro/wind power
Politics & public opinion will determine
nuclear powers future in the US