EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2023)
Radiological characterization of high-energy proton Tantalum targets from CERN-ISOLDE Facility
Abstract
Accelerator-based techniques are considered among the leading methods to produce radioactive nuclei. The ISOLDE facility (Isotope mass Separator On-Line DEvice) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) is a unique source of beams of radioactive nuclides that are used in a wide range of research domains, from nuclear astrophysics to life sciences. Over 400 ISOLDE targets are currently stored at CERN and an average of 30 targets are irradiated every year. All these targets are planned to be dismantled and disposed of as radioactive waste in a dedicated repository in Switzerland. This paper provides an overview of the challenges related to the radionuclide activity predictions, the number of activation scenarios, dismantling and conditioning of the Radioactive Waste (RW) using a hot cell (HC), the high dose rate, uncertainties related to unknown geometry parameters of the RW packages, and finally industrializing a complex RW elimination process as ITEP for an accelerator complex. The performed work addresses each of these challenges and offers technical solutions based on state-of-the-art computational codes, statistical techniques, and state of art Non-Destructive Assay (NDA) techniques using high energy-resolution gamma spectrometry. The methodology followed can be of guidance for the development of similar processes at other facilities.
Keywords