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APPLICATION SUCCESS STORY


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EEG Uses Crystal Ball to Assess an Inhalation Dose from a Radioactive Source

CUSTOMER OF THE MONTH (MAR., 2000)

Dale Rucker is an environmental engineer for the Environmental Evaluation Group (EEG), an independent technical oversight group for the Department of Energy's (DOE) Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) project. The WIPP, a deep geologic repository for defense-generated transuranic waste, is located in southeastern New Mexico. The EEG performs independent technical analyses covering various aspects of the WIPP, including reviewing the safety analysis report. The safety analysis report is a DOE-required report for nuclear facilities that documents all aspects of safety related to the handling of radioactive materials.

As part of its responsibilities, the DOE performs safety analysis studies to identify the potential for accidents such as an airborne release of transuranic radioactive particles. This type of accident would pose a significant inhalation hazard, so the DOE calculates the maximum radiological dose from an accidentally released airborne contaminant. The DOE analyses are conducted deterministically, and the values are chosen based on standard DOE assumptions from various handbooks and guides. For example, the calculated dose to a receptor is simply the product of values representing worst case and typical site conditions. The DOE models do not take into consideration actual measurements of meteorological conditions or expected radioactivity in the waste containers.

After the DOE safety studies have been completed, Rucker and the EEG review the results and assess the potential radiological release consequences. To ensure that no potential risk factors have been overlooked, the EEG performs a complementary probabilistic analysis, a procedure mandated by the International Council of Radiation Protection (ICRP) (for details, see ICRP-64 - "Protection from Potential Exposure: A Conceptual Framework." International Commission of Radiation Protection, 1994). Unlike the deterministic approach, a probabilistic assessment of the inhalation dose calculations can consider a multitude of independent scenarios. Single-value input parameters are replaced by probability distributions that represent meaningful variations in the range of conditions. These parameters are then randomly sampled to simulate realistic accident scenarios.

For his probabilistic model, Rucker used Crystal Ball and Monte Carlo simulation to establish the random sampling procedure. Probabilistic variables (Crystal Ball "assumptions") included site-specific meteorological conditions and varying quantities of radioactive sources within the waste containers. He ran a total of 10,000 simulations, and the forecasted doses were plotted to show 95%, 50%, and 5% dose likelihood. The 95% dose likelihood showed that the DOE deterministic doses were generally higher and therefore more conservative than the probabilistic doses. This result was attributed to the effect of smearing the high and low end values from the probability distribution functions. The more conservative DOE assessment showed that the release consequences may be over-represented by DOE, and that the high doses attributed to accident scenarios are less likely to occur.

The Crystal Ball analysis also identified a potential weakness of the deterministic approach for accidents involving a large number of waste containers. The standard method used to assess the radioactive source in an accident assumes that one container was loaded to its administrative limit of 80 Ci, with the remaining containers at 8 CI While some accidents were assessed as having only one container, with the average source of 80 CI, other accidents involved a larger number of containers. In these multi-container cases, the deterministic assessment showed a lower average source from each container than was reflected in the probabilistic analysis. Based on this finding, the EEG suggested to the DOE that a reassessment of the source term values should be conducted in the evaluation of deterministic doses.

To learn more about the WIPP, you can visit http://www.wipp.carlsbad.nm.us/wipp.htm.

Mr. Rucker can be contacted at:
Environmental Evaluation Group
7007 Wyoming Blvd. NE, Suite F-2
Albuquerque, NM 87109
Tel: 505.828.1003
E-mail: druck@eeg.org

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