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    • CFM - Colloid Formation & MigrationCFM - Colloid Formation & Migration
    • C-FRS - CRIEPI’s Fractured Rock StudiesC-FRS - CRIEPI’s Fractured Rock Studies
    • CIM - Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in CementCIM - Carbon-14 and Iodine-129 Migration in Cement
    • ESDRED / TEM -Test and Evaluation of Monitoring SystemsESDRED / TEM -Test and Evaluation of Monitoring Systems
    • FEBEXe - Full-scale Engineered Barriers ExperimentFEBEXe - Full-scale Engineered Barriers Experiment
    • FEBEX-DP - Febex Dismantling ProjectFEBEX-DP - Febex Dismantling Project
    • FORGE - Laboratory Column ExperimentsFORGE - Laboratory Column Experiments
    • GAST - Gas-Permeable Seal TestGAST - Gas-Permeable Seal Test
    • HotBENT - High Temperature Effects on Bentonite BuffersHotBENT - High Temperature Effects on Bentonite Buffers
    • ISC - In-situ Stimulation & Circulation ExperimentISC - In-situ Stimulation & Circulation Experiment
    • LASMO - Large Scale MonitoringLASMO - Large Scale Monitoring
    • LCS - Long-Term Cement StudiesLCS - Long-Term Cement Studies
    • LTD - Long Term DiffusionLTD - Long Term Diffusion
    • MaCoTe The Material Corrosion TestMaCoTe The Material Corrosion Test
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Radiation Protection at the GTS

Recent work at the GTS

Details
By Administrator
Administrator
Parent Category: GTS Background Information
Category: Radiation Protection at the GTS
10 February 2009
10 February 2009
Last Updated: 25 March 2015

A wide range of radionuclide tracers have been successfully applied at the GTS since the building of the laboratory. In Phase V at the GTS, two projects used radionuclides as tracers. These were the Hyperalkaline Plume in Fractured rock (HPF) section, Phase V and the Colloid and Radionuclide Retardation project (CRR) section, Phase V. The CRR project is complete and the final reports are due for publication soon, whereas the HPF project is in the sample analysis stage.

To date all work has been carried out safely, all wastes have been dealt with according to HSK regulations and no doses above the natural background have been received by the workers.

Radionuclides applied in-situ at the GTS

Currently, the Long Term Diffusion (LTD) project utilises a range of radioactive tracers in the various work packages (WP 1, WP 2 and WP 4).

After the success of the on site analysis during the HPF experiment, a new Radiation Controlled Zone has been established in the Central Facility of the GTS. The Level C laboratory is licensed up to the end of GTS Phase VI (in 2013) and provides a great deal of flexibility for the experiments. Preliminary post-mortem analysis of excavated rock material can now be carried out at the GTS.


Pb shields for exposure of Imaging Plates for autoradiography


The BAS 1800i scanner for beta autoradiography

Gamma spectrometer for determination of radionuclide concentration in various sample geometry

Want to know more ?

Please e-mail Dr. Andrew Martin (responsible for radiation protection at the Grimsel Test Site):

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

Links for radiation protection.

http://www.bag.admin.ch
Bundesamt für Gesundheit/Swiss Federal Office of Public Health. This is our regulator. (German, French, Italian or English)
 

http://www.iaea.org
The International Atomic Energy Authority
 

http://www.hpa.org.uk/radiation
Some good general information on radiation
 

http://www.icrp.org/
The International Commision for Radiation Protection.
 

 

Fate of Radionuclides at the GTS

Details
By Administrator
Administrator
Parent Category: GTS Background Information
Category: Radiation Protection at the GTS
10 February 2009
10 February 2009
Last Updated: 30 July 2014

The radionuclides we add can have several fates and the waste treatment we use depends on the physical and chemical properties of the radionuclides used.

Much of the work at the Grimsel Test Site (GTS) has involved short half-life tracers, which decay very quickly to non-radioactive forms. Radioactive tracers with longer half lives are taken to the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) for treatment and final disposal.

Removal of cores from the excavation Project
Removal of cores from the Excavation Project

In specific cases (e.g. Excavation Project), where the radionuclides are held very tightly by the rock, the whole rock mass can be immobilised via injection of an epoxy resin. The area of rock containing the radionuclides is then physically removed by taking large (30 cm diameter) cores of rock (which also contains the radionuclides) from the GTS.

Animation of overcoring procedure at the GTS
Overview of the overcoring procedure

The extracted cores can then be analysed by very precise radiochemical techniques, which allow the sites of radionuclide retardation to be observed.

 

Monitoring of Radioactivity at the GTS

Details
By Administrator
Administrator
Parent Category: GTS Background Information
Category: Radiation Protection at the GTS
10 February 2009
10 February 2009
Last Updated: 30 July 2014

Every person working in the radiation controlled zone (whether as level B or C) wears a detector that records any radiation dose that they receive. This badge is called a thermo-luminescence detector (TLD). The area within the laboratory is also monitored using state-of-the-art instruments that measure the radiation levels within the laboratory and also with contamination monitors to ensure no spillages have occurred. Computer systems linked to very precise measuring equipment monitor the radionuclide tracers in the groundwater in real time.

Monitoring Equipment at the GTS
Monitoring equipment at the GTS

We have received clearance from ENSI for the use of transuranics radionuclides in the GTS. This is based on the successful application of "simpler" radionuclide tracers in previous experiments and the GTS is, to date, the only underground rock laboratory in the world where transuranics radionuclides can be added directly to the ground water.

All the work carried out in the controlled zone is strictly regulated now by BAG and permission is needed before any work involving radionuclides commences.
 

Radiation Protection at the GTS - Introduction

Details
By Administrator
Administrator
Parent Category: GTS Background Information
Category: Radiation Protection at the GTS
10 February 2009
10 February 2009
Last Updated: 11 June 2021

At the Grimsel Test Site (GTS), we carry out experiments with radionuclides as tracers of the processes in the rocks. Radionuclide tracers are very useful because we can detect them at much lower concentrations than non-radioactive tracers and because they provide individual "fingerprints" which allow us to follow natural mechanisms in the rock and groundwater unambiguously and this makes our experiments more useful than if we used non-radioactive tracers

In addition, use of radioactive tracers in the GTS allows us to study safety-relevant radionuclides in an environment analogous to that of a real radioactive waste repository.

What is radiation protection?

Radiation protection is ensuring that the use of radionuclide tracers at the GTS does not harm the people who work and visit the GTS and ensures that there is no impact on the environment. Initially very strict regulations were set by HSK (Hauptabteilung für die Sicherheit der Kernanlagen / Swiss Federal Nuclear Safety Inspectorate - now ENSI ) and continues with BAG (Bundesamt für Gesundheit / Swiss Federal Office of Public Health) and all work with radionuclides is supervised by a Radiation Protection Expert (RPE).

We wish to thank ENSI and BAG for their continued support of our work at the GTS.

Safe use of radionuclides at the GTS

In 1988, a special area of the GTS tunnels was designated as a radiation controlled zone and this conforms to regulations laid down by ENSI regarding the safe handling and use of radionuclides. In the unlikely case of an accident, the controlled zone would ensure minimal impact on the GTS and any staff or visitors present.
 

Location of the controlled zone in the GTS

Location of controlled zone on GTS map and picture of gate

In normal experiments, the lab operates as a Level C radiochemistry laboratory. The staff working in the controlled zone are monitored for any contamination and all material is handled according to strict regulations.

In addition, our laboratory can routinely be upgraded to a Level B radiochemistry laboratory. This is used when higher activities of radionuclide tracers are required when alpha-emitting radionuclides are used or the set-up of the experiment poses a greater radiological risk to the workers (e.g. during excavation of rock cores as in the Excavation Project). The requirements of a level B lab are:

  • Protective clothing must be worn when working in the controlled zone.
  • There is a special changing area at the entrance to the lab.
  • All people and equipment coming in and out of the laboratory are monitored.
  • The air supply within the laboratory is separate to that for the rest of the GTS, is maintained under atmospheric pressure (to contain any possible contamination) and is filtered with any particles trapped in these filters monitored for radiation.

Special clothing worn when performing radionuclide injection
Tracer injection during the EP Project

For further information please contact Dr. Andrew Martin:
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

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