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A respiratory model for uranium aluminide based on occupational data

R W Leggett1,4, K F Eckerman1 and J D Boice Jr2,3

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As part of an epidemiological study, doses from intake of radionuclides were estimated for workers employed during a 52-year period at the Rocketdyne/Atomics International facility in California. The facility was involved in a variety of research programmes, including nuclear fuel fabrication, spent nuclear fuel decladding, and reactor operation and disassembly. Most of the documented intakes involved inhalation of enriched uranium (U), fission products, or plutonium (Pu). Highest doses were estimated for a group of workers exposed to airborne uranium aluminide (UAlx) during the fabrication of reactor fuel plates. Much of the exposure to UAlx occurred early in the fuel fabrication programme, before it was recognised that intake and lung retention were being underestimated from urinary data due to an unexpected delayed dissolution of the inhaled material. In workers who had been removed from exposure, the rate of urinary excretion of U increased for a few months, peaked, and then declined at a rate consistent with moderately soluble material. This pattern differs markedly from the monotonically decreasing absorption rates represented by the default absorption types in the Human Respiratory Tract Model (HRTM) of the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP). This paper summarises the findings on the behaviour of UAlx in these workers and describes material-specific parameter values of the HRTM based on this information.


PACS

89.60.Ec Environmental safety

87.55.N- Radiation monitoring, control, and safety

87.19.U- Hemodynamics

87.57.uq Dosimetry

Subjects

Medical physics

Biological physics

Environmental and Earth science

Dates

Issue 4 (December 2005)

Received 15 April 2005, accepted for publication 28 September 2005, in final form 6 September 2005

Published 6 December 2005



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