dc.creatorSMITH, RICARDO B.
dc.creatorTESSARO, ANA P.G.
dc.creatorROLINDO, NATALIE C.
dc.creatorVICENTE, ROBERTO
dc.creatorANNUAL WASTE MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE, 45th
dc.date2020-10-28T15:46:27Z
dc.date2020-10-28T15:46:27Z
dc.dateMarch 3-7, 2019
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-28T14:16:55Z
dc.date.available2023-09-28T14:16:55Z
dc.identifierhttp://repositorio.ipen.br/handle/123456789/31565
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/9001788
dc.descriptionIn 1987, in the city of Goiania, Brazil, a derelict teletherapy machine was disassembled by scavengers and Cs-137 was released in the environment, unleashing the biggest radiological accident in Brazil. During the 15 days before the accident was acknowledged, some contaminated materials were sold and delivered to recycling factories in a few cities in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil, in the form of metal scrap and recycled paper bales. The contaminated material was then collected, the metal scrap was conditioned in forty-three 200-liter drums, and the paper bales were stored in fifty 1.6 cubic meter steel boxes at the interim storage of the Nuclear and Energy Research Institute (IPEN), in the city of Sao Paulo, and there remained ever since. In 2017, 30 years later, initial analyses were performed at a sample of these boxes, checking for their activity, weight, and incongruences between the original values recorded at the time of collection and the measurement results 30 years later. The results indicated that none of the boxes checked were close to the clearance limit and that, without any sort of treatment, this radioactive waste should be stored for at least 150 years more. Visual inspection could not be performed at that time. Nowadays, some of the boxes were opened and samples from the contaminated material inside were taken for analysis. The main objective of this work is to report the results from the evaluation of the physical state of this material. After these analyses, the treatment options for volume reduction that were previously proposed were reviewed, and the method that best suits the current characteristics of the waste was chosen.
dc.format1-7
dc.publisherWaste Management Symposia
dc.rightsclosedAccess
dc.subjectcesium 137
dc.subjectenvironment
dc.subjectradiation accidents
dc.subjectradiation hazards
dc.subjectradiation protection
dc.subjectradioactive waste storage
dc.subjectradioactive wastes
dc.subjectradiotherapy
dc.subjectrecycling
dc.subjectscrap metals
dc.subjectsteels
dc.subjecturban areas
dc.titleFurther analyses of the unburied Goiania Accident packages
dc.typeTexto completo de evento
dc.coverageI
dc.localTempe, Arizona, USA


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