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Impact of License Extension on Radionuclide Buildup Assumptions

This presentation discusses the concerns and potential impacts of assuming a longer buildup period for radionuclide activity in different exposure pathways. The study concludes that the extended buildup period has a negligible impact on dose calculations and does not require modifications to existing equations.

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Impact of License Extension on Radionuclide Buildup Assumptions

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  1. Impact of License Extension on Radionuclide Buildup Assumptions Ken Sejkora Entergy Nuclear Northeast – Pilgrim Station Presented at the 18th Annual RETS-REMP Workshop Charlotte, NC / 23-25 June 2008

  2. Reason for Concern • Regulatory Guide 1.109 accounts for buildup of radioactivity for the following exposure pathways: • Waterborne Nuclides in Shoreline Deposits • Waterborne Nuclides in Irrigated Foods • Deposition of Airborne Nuclides on Ground Plane • Deposition of Airborne Nuclides on Soil and Crops… forage, produce, vegetables, milk, meat

  3. Reason for Concern (continued) • Regulatory Guide 1.109 assumes buildup period (tb) of 15 years • “…approximate midpoint of facility operating life…” per Equations A-4 and C-1 • Many facilities have operated for well beyond 15 years, and many are pursuing license extension for an additional 20 years of operation… total span of up to 60 years

  4. Reason for Concern (continued) • What is the impact on dose calculations of assuming buildup during entire duration of 40-year license? • What is the impact on dose calculations of assuming 20 years of additional operation?

  5. Buildup Equation • Used in RG-1.109 equations 3, 4, A-4, A-6, A-7, A-8, A-13, C-1, and C-5 • General form of equation: Where: λi = nuclide decay constant, yr -1 tb = buildup period, yr

  6. Buildup Factor by Nuclide

  7. Buildup Factor Ratio by Nuclide

  8. Clarification of Buildup Equation for Vegetation Pathways Equation for Buildup in Vegetation: External Surface Contamination Term… Short-term weathering Internal Plant-Soil Uptake Term… Long-term metabolism Affects equations for irrigated crops, produce, vegetables, and forage (which in turn affects milk and meat)

  9. Vegetation: External Contamination Term Where: r = fraction of deposited activity retained on leaf/plant surface λEi = weathering removal rate constant, 14-day half-life & nuclide half-life te = exposure time to deposition fallout; forage = 30d, crops = 60d Yv = vegetation yield; forage =0.7 kg/m2, crops = 2 kg/m2 The external contamination term from deposition fallout typically accounts for 75 to 100% of the total radionuclide activity in and on vegetation. Not dependent on duration of buildup period.

  10. Vegetation: Internal Plant-Soil Uptake Term Where: fI = fraction of year forage/crops are growing or irrigated (“exposed”) Biv = soil-to-plant uptake factor for nuclide i P = effective “surface” soil density, 240 kg/m2 The metabolic uptake term from soil typically accounts for less than 10% of the total radionuclide activity in and on forage (cow-milk pathway), and less than 20% in the crop pathway.

  11. Forage Concentration Terms

  12. Forage ConcentrationBuildup Factor Ratio by Nuclide

  13. Crop Concentration Terms

  14. Crop ConcentrationBuildup Factor Ratio by Nuclide

  15. Summary • Extended buildup period has negligible impact on ingestion pathway concentrations and doses from irrigated crops, produce, vegetables, milk, and meat… less than 25% increase for worst-case nuclide (Sr-90) for 60-year buildup period; most nuclides exhibit <1% increase

  16. Summary (continued) • Ground plane or sediment exposure can be affected up to 2-times the 15-year assumption, but these exposure pathways typically contribute less than 0.05% of the total dose • Buildup equations assume uniform release rates (Ci/yr) over duration of buildup period. Current and future release rates are likely much lower than those when plants began operation

  17. Conclusion • Increased buildup time posed by license extension carries negligible impact for affecting effluent dose calculations. • There is no need to modify RG-1.109 equations or buildup assumptions to account for additional buildup from additional years of operation.

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