Radiolysis of water by α- and β-particles from spent nuclear fuel

被引:1
|
作者
Leotlela, M. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Phys, Johannesburg, South Africa
关键词
Redox reaction; Nanotechnology; Hydrogen energy; Free radicals; Linear energy transfer; G-values;
D O I
10.1016/j.radphyschem.2023.111361
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
When water is subjected to radiolysis by charged ionising radiation particles (beta and alpha-particles) from nuclear plants, they generate H2 as one of the radiolytic byproducts which has highest Gvalues than other radiolytic products. The Gvalues obtained by alpha-radiolysis used are listed in brackets next to their respective nuclides which are: 237Np (2.551E-01), 241Am (2.269E-01), 242mAm(2.370E-01). In addition to a high Gvalue, it also has high calorific value (141 MJ/kg) which can be used in hydrogen energy generation (HEG). Hence, apart from the radiological health risk of nuclear plants, if H2 released nuclear plants is harvested and used in hydrogen energy generation it can result in great cogeneration opportunities where nuclear energy supplies hydrogen, which would otherwise be wasted, to a hydrogen energy generation plant for additional power generation.This is even more advantageous if one takes into consideration that hydrogen Gvalues (G(H)) values from nuclear plants increase with an increase in duration of water exposure to ionising radiation and also that it, i.e. (G(H)values also increase with an increase in radiation flux to which water is exposed. Hence the longer the nuclear plant is running and the higher the power reactor is increased (and consequently the radiation flux) the higher the Gvalues of hydrogen and therefore the higher the power output of hydrogen energy generation.The idea of cogeneration becomes even more lucrative if we consider that hydrogen energy generation is clean (also known as green energy) because of its insignificant contribution to environmental pollution. Therefore, as energy demand increases and the need to curb climate change by reducing over reliance on power generation that release large quantities of CO2 to the atmosphere is heightened; the more sense it makes from energy generation/supply and environmental protection point of view for cogeneration of hydrogen energy and nuclear energy.This article presents the results of radiochemical events/processes that occur when water is exposed to ionising radiation of charged particles (beta and alpha-particles). These results supplement the fluctuation in effective dose theory/hypothesis of a previous study on time-dependent variations in the radiological health impact of an interim SNFS facility presented in 2021 (Leotlela, 2021). It also provides an analysis of factors that cause ra-diation damage by studying the effects of the dose rate on both high and low linear energy transfers (LETs). High LET radiation refers to all those particles with a track-average LET higher than a few eV nm- 1. These include alpha particles, protons, neutrons, and heavy ions. Low LET, on the other hand, refers to particles with a track-average LET lower than 1 eV nm- 1. These include beta, gamma, x-rays and electrons.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Biofilm formation in spent nuclear fuel pools and bioremediation of radioactive water
    Sarró, MI
    García, AM
    Moreno, DA
    INTERNATIONAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2005, 8 (03) : 223 - 230
  • [32] Temperature dependence of hydrogen yields from the radiolysis of reprocessing solutions: the dissolved solution of spent nuclear fuel (FEB, 10.1080/00223131.2025.2460532, 2025)
    Hasegawa, Satoshi
    Tamauchi, Yoshikazu
    Nakano, Masanao
    Kubo, Kazuki
    Abe, Yuuma
    Kaneko, Masaaki
    Yokoyama, Hiroki
    Etoh, Yoshinori
    Matsushima, Kenichi
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2025,
  • [33] Perspective Compounds for Immobilization of Spent Electrolyte from Pyrochemical Processing of Spent Nuclear Fuel
    Kulikova, Svetlana A.
    Danilov, Sergey S.
    Matveenko, Anna V.
    Frolova, Anna V.
    Belova, Kseniya Y.
    Petrov, Vladimir G.
    Vinokurov, Sergey E.
    Myasoedov, Boris F.
    APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2021, 11 (23):
  • [34] Recovery of palladium from reprocessing waste of spent nuclear fuel
    Fang, S.
    Fu, L.
    Wang, Y.
    Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry, 1994, 186 (03) : 285 - 290
  • [35] Separation of uranium from fission products in spent nuclear fuel
    Taw, Felicia L.
    Goff, George S.
    Peper, Shane M.
    Brodnax, Lia F.
    Field, Stephanie E.
    Wakefield, Chris
    Runde, Wolfgang H.
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2006, 232 : 837 - 837
  • [36] SHIPMENT OF SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL FROM THE CZECH REPUBLIC FOR REPROCESSING
    Podlaha, Josef
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 22ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUCLEAR ENGINEERING - 2014, VOL 4, 2014,
  • [37] Isolation and identification of bacteria from spent nuclear fuel pools
    Chicote, E
    García, AM
    Moreno, DA
    Sarró, MI
    Lorenzo, PI
    Montero, F
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2005, 32 (04) : 155 - 162
  • [38] OPTIMIZATION OF HANDLING SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL FROM THE TENDER LEPSE
    Vavilkin, V. N.
    Dushev, S. A.
    Kolomiets, B. I.
    Sandler, N. G.
    Timofeev, A. V.
    Kazakov, S. V.
    Kashka, M. M.
    Tokarenko, A. I.
    ATOMIC ENERGY, 2011, 111 (01) : 74 - 77
  • [39] Optimization of handling spent nuclear fuel from the tender lepse
    V. N. Vavilkin
    S. A. Dushev
    B. I. Kolomiets
    N. G. Sandler
    A. V. Timofeev
    S. V. Kazakov
    M. M. Kashka
    A. I. Tokarenko
    Atomic Energy, 2011, 111 : 74 - 77
  • [40] Distribution of metallic fission-product particles in the cladding liner of spent nuclear fuel
    Richard A. Clark
    Michele A. Conroy
    Timothy G. Lach
    Edgar C. Buck
    Kristi L. Pellegrini
    Bruce K. McNamara
    Jon M. Schwantes
    npj Materials Degradation, 4