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Decommissioning of the Risoe Hot Cell facility. 1. Periodic report, covering July 1 to December 31, 1990

Abstract

The Hot Cell facility at Risoe has been in active use since 1964. During the years several types of nuclear fuels have been handled and examined: test reactor fuel pins from the Danish reactor DR3, the Norwegian Halden reactor, etc; power reactor fuel pins from several foreign reactors, including plutonium enriched pins; HTGR fuel from the Dragon reactor. All kinds of physical and chemical non-destructive and destructive post irradiation examinations have been performed. Besides, different radiotherapy sources have been produced, mainly cobalt sources. The general object of the decommissioning programme for the Hot Cell facility was to obtain a safe condition for the total building that does not require the special safety provisions. The hot cell building will be usable for other purposes after decommissioning. The facilicy comprised six concrete cells, lead cells, glove boxes, a shielded unit for temporary storage of waste, frogman area, decontamination areas, workshops, various installations of importance for safe operation of the plant, offices, etc. The tasks comprised e.g. removal of all irradiated fuel items, removal of other radioactive items, removal of contaminated equipment, and decontamination of all the cells and rooms. The goal was to decontaminate all the concrete cells to a degree where  More>>
Authors:
Publication Date:
Feb 01, 1991
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
RISO-HOT-DECOM-P-1
Reference Number:
SCA: 560180; PA: AIX-23:030842; SN: 92000709581
Resource Relation:
Other Information: PBD: Feb 1991
Subject:
61 RADIATION PROTECTION AND DOSIMETRY; DECOMMISSIONING; HOT CELLS; DECONTAMINATION; RISOE NATIONAL LABORATORY; 560180; RADIATION PROTECTION PROCEDURES
OSTI ID:
10136822
Research Organizations:
Risoe National Lab., Roskilde (Denmark). Materials Dept.
Country of Origin:
Denmark
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Other: ON: DE92623689; CNN: Contract FI2D-0011-DK; TRN: DK9200004030842
Availability:
OSTI; NTIS (US Sales Only); INIS
Submitting Site:
DKN
Size:
9 p.
Announcement Date:
Jul 05, 2005

Citation Formats

Carlsen, H. Decommissioning of the Risoe Hot Cell facility. 1. Periodic report, covering July 1 to December 31, 1990. Denmark: N. p., 1991. Web.
Carlsen, H. Decommissioning of the Risoe Hot Cell facility. 1. Periodic report, covering July 1 to December 31, 1990. Denmark.
Carlsen, H. 1991. "Decommissioning of the Risoe Hot Cell facility. 1. Periodic report, covering July 1 to December 31, 1990." Denmark.
@misc{etde_10136822,
title = {Decommissioning of the Risoe Hot Cell facility. 1. Periodic report, covering July 1 to December 31, 1990}
author = {Carlsen, H}
abstractNote = {The Hot Cell facility at Risoe has been in active use since 1964. During the years several types of nuclear fuels have been handled and examined: test reactor fuel pins from the Danish reactor DR3, the Norwegian Halden reactor, etc; power reactor fuel pins from several foreign reactors, including plutonium enriched pins; HTGR fuel from the Dragon reactor. All kinds of physical and chemical non-destructive and destructive post irradiation examinations have been performed. Besides, different radiotherapy sources have been produced, mainly cobalt sources. The general object of the decommissioning programme for the Hot Cell facility was to obtain a safe condition for the total building that does not require the special safety provisions. The hot cell building will be usable for other purposes after decommissioning. The facilicy comprised six concrete cells, lead cells, glove boxes, a shielded unit for temporary storage of waste, frogman area, decontamination areas, workshops, various installations of importance for safe operation of the plant, offices, etc. The tasks comprised e.g. removal of all irradiated fuel items, removal of other radioactive items, removal of contaminated equipment, and decontamination of all the cells and rooms. The goal was to decontaminate all the concrete cells to a degree where no loose contamination exists in the cells, and where the radiation level is so low, that total removal of the cell structures can be done at any time in the future without significant dose commitments. (AB).}
place = {Denmark}
year = {1991}
month = {Feb}
}