The embodiments disclosed herein relate to radioactive waste disposal, and, in particular to laser ablation systems and methods for decontamination of radioactive particles from underlying radioactive materials.
In many modern facilities and systems involving radioactive materials, such as nuclear power generation facilities or systems employing nuclear ordinance, radioactive particles will be deposited upon underlying materials. These particles preclude standard disposal and recycling of the underlying material, and other uses or processing of the underlying material due to the radioactive hazard posed. Removing these particles from the underlying material and thereby decontaminating these facilities and systems require freeing the radioactive particles from the underlying material in a manner that limits human exposure inside a containment barrier and contains the particles for separate disposal.
Conventional decontamination methods require a human worker to enter past the containment barrier to deploy decontamination tools and remove to radioactive particles. In the process, the human worker will be exposed to internal and external of radiation hazards. In certain environments these radiation levels are such that the human worker will be exposed to their annual allotment of radiation in a short period of time often without being able to complete the decontamination process. Even when exposure is low enough to permit human workers to enter the containment barrier this presents a substantial health risk and personal protective equipment impedes the decontamination process. There are also significant costs associated with mitigating these risks and impedances.
Therefore, it is desirable to have a remotely deployable system to remove and segregate the radioactive particles into a controlled container for disposal, leaving the substrate base material radiologically clean and suitable for conventional disposal or recycling while limiting exposure of human workers to radiation.
Accordingly, a laser ablation system for removing radioactive particles is desired that overcomes some of the disadvantages of existing techniques.
Provided is a laser ablation system for decontamination of radioactive particles. The system includes a laser head assembly comprising a laser for ablating radioactive particles from an underlying material, a shroud surrounding the laser for containing the ablated radioactive particles, and a suction nozzle for receiving an airflow from the shroud and releasing the airflow, wherein the airflow contains the ablated radioactive particles. The waste management system for removing and containing the ablated radioactive particles comprises a gas pulse regenerable filtration system for removing radioactive particles from the airflow and depositing them in a containment flask, and a vacuum for moving the airflow through the hose into the containment flask.
The waste management system may further include a filtration system for removing radioactive particles from the airflow.
The laser ablation system may be remotely controlled by at least one control panel. The at least one control panel may be located outside a containment barrier of a radioactive particle site. The gas pulse regenerable filtration system may be controlled by the control panel.
A crawler may move the laser head assembly to an ablation site. The crawler my be deployed by a deployment system for transporting the crawler and laser head assembly to a deployment location.
The laser ablation system may further include a cable management system for spooling and unspooling the hose when the crawler delivers the laser head assembly to the ablation site. The cable management system may be further configured to spool and unspool power and data cables connected to the crawler and the laser head assembly.
The laser ablation system may further include a hose for receiving the airflow from the laser head assembly at a first end and releasing the airflow to a waste management system at a second end.
Provided is a method for decontamination of radioactive particles. The method includes laser ablating radioactive particles from an underlying material, containing the ablated radioactive particles, receiving an airflow and releasing the airflow, wherein the airflow contains the ablated radioactive particles, releasing the airflow to a waste management system, and removing and containing the ablated radioactive particles.
The method may further include removing radioactive particles from the airflow and depositing the radioactive particles in a containment flask.
The method may further include removing radioactive particles from the airflow with a secondary second filtration system.
The method may further include remotely controlling the laser ablation system with at least one control panel. The at least one control panel may be located outside a containment barrier of a radioactive particle site. The gas pulse regenerable filtration system may be controlled by the control panel.
The method may further include delivering a laser head assembly to an ablation site with a crawler. The crawler may be deployed by a deployment system for transporting the crawler and laser head assembly to a deployment location.
The method may further include spooling and unspooling a hose when the crawler delivers the laser head assembly to the ablation site.
A cable management system may be configured to spool and unspool power and data cables connected to the crawler and the laser head assembly.
The drawings included herewith are for illustrating various examples of articles, methods, and apparatuses of the present specification.
Various apparatuses or processes will be described below to provide an example of each claimed embodiment. No embodiment described below limits any claimed embodiment and any claimed embodiment may cover processes or apparatuses that differ from those described below. The claimed embodiments are not limited to apparatuses or processes having all of the features of any one apparatus or process described below or to features common to multiple or all of the apparatuses described below.
The systems and methods described herein provide a laser ablation system for removing radioactive particles from an underlying material. Laser ablation refers to a process in which a laser heats a surface of a material aerosolizing the top layer of the surface thereby ablating it from the underlying material. The laser ablation system described herein ablates radioactive particles deposited on a surface of an underlying material, thereby aerosolizing the radioactive particles from the underlying surface. A vacuum moves the airflow containing the radioactive particles through a hose to waste management system where the radioactive particles are filtered out of the airflow and into a containment flask.
The extent to which removing radioactive particles from the underlying surface would cause the underlying material to be classified as safe for disposal/recycling may vary based on factors such as radioactive particle surface accumulation and underlying material thickness and composition. As such, the magnitude of the radioactive particles ablated may be guided by the ablation site conditions. This magnitude may also incorporate a desired tolerance to ensure the safe status of the underlying material.
Discussed herein are various components of a laser ablation system. It is to be understood that these components may vary for different radioactive particle sites.
Reference will now be made to
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The laser head assembly 210 includes a laser head 212 which emits a laser beam onto the surface of the ablation site 202 thereby ablating radioactive particles 206 off the surface of the underlying material 204. The laser head 212 includes a laser having with a minimum output of 200 Watts. The laser head 212 may be powered by 3-phase 480 Voltage Alternating Current. The laser head 212 may be air or water cooled. The laser head 212 may be housed in a dust resistant housing. The laser head 212 may be powered by a spooled cable that extends for 16 meters or more. The laser head 212 may further be able to adjust the geometry of the laser beam emitted.
The laser head assembly 210 further includes a shroud 214 which surrounds the laser head 212. The shroud 214 contains the ablated radioactive particles 206, which are aerosolized by laser ablation, from spreading into the surrounding environment.
The laser head assembly 210 also includes a suction nozzle 216. A first end of the suction nozzle 216 pass through the shroud 214 such that the first end of the suction nozzle 216 is internal to the shroud and a second end of the suction nozzle 216 is external to the shroud 214. The suction nozzle 216, therefore, acts as a conduit for an airflow 220 from the ablation site 202 to pass through the shroud 214, the airflow 220 initially including aerosolized radioactive particles 206. The first end of the suction nozzle 216 receives the airflow 220 within the shroud 214 and conveys the airflow 220 to a second end of the suction nozzle 216 which is connected to a first end of a hose 222.
The first end of the hose 222 receives the airflow 220 from the second end of the suction nozzle 216. The first end of the hose 222 may be connected to the suction nozzle 216 in a removable manner to facilitate deployment of the laser ablation system 201. The first end of the hose 222 may also be hard mounted to the suction nozzle 216 to reduce the cost and/or improve the reliability of establishing a desired seal.
A second end of the hose 222, is affixed to a waste management system 230. The second end of hose 222, like the first end of the hose 222, may be removable or hard mounted for similar reasoning.
The waste management system 230 includes a vacuum 232 which provides suction to draw air and generate the airflow 220 from the shroud 214, through the suction nozzle 216 and hose 222 into the waste management system 230. The aerosolized radioactive particles travel to the waste management system 230 in the airflow 220. The vacuum 232 may be configured to operate continuously or at intervals (pulsed) during laser ablation.
The waste management system 220 further includes a first filtration system. The first filtration system is a gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234 for removing radioactive particles 206 from the airflow 220. The airflow exits the hose 222 into the waste management system 230 and is received by the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234. The gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234 extracts the aerosolized radioactive particles 206 from the airflow 220.
The gas pulse regenerable filtration system deposits the radioactive particles 206 extracted by the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234 into a containment flask 238 via a gas pulse. The containment flask 238 contains the radioactive particles 206 for removal from the radioactive particle site 200 and further disposal. The containment flask 238 is removable and interchangeable with another containment flask 238 for further operation of the waste management system 230.
The waste management system further includes a second filtration system 236 for removing radioactive particles 206 from the airflow 220. As the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234 extracts the radioactive particles 206, the second filtration system 236 may only collect low levels of radioactive particles 206 that remain in the airflow 220 after passing through the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234. This low level of radioactive material means that the filters may be disposed of in a less frequent manner than should the full load of radioactive particles be therein captured. The second filtration system 236, in addition to other systems such as the gas pulse regenerable filtration system, may protect the vacuum 232 from radioactive exposure as well as standard particles (e.g., dust) present in the airflow. The second filter system 236 may include one or more HEPA, and ultra-low paper filters.
The laser ablation system 201 may be controlled by one or more laser ablation control panels 240. The radioactive particle 200 site may include a containment barrier 242 for shielding against radiation. Typically, the laser ablation control panel 240 is located outside of the containment barrier 242 such that an operator will be shielded from radiation while controlling the laser ablation system 201. The laser ablation control panel 240 may be a dedicated control panel, integrated into an existing control panel for the site and/or integrated into a control panel for a component of the laser ablation system 201 such as a control panel for the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 234.
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The airflow 220 is further moved from the outlet of the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 406 to a second filtration system 410 which further filters remaining radioactive particles 206 and other foreign particles out of the airflow 220. The primary filtering provided by the gas pulse regenerable filtration system 406 substantially reduces the quantity of particles that are trapped by the second filtration system 410 and therefore reduces the waste generated and maintenance required by the second filtration system 410.
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The crawler 502 travels through the pipe 510 via one or more tracks 508 which contact the inner wall of the pipe 510. Once the crawler 502 arrives at the ablation site 506 the crawler 502 centers the laser head assembly 504 with respect to the pipe 510. The crawler 502 may proceed through the pipe 510 while the laser head assembly 504 is rotated/oriented such that the laser passes over the ablation site 506 (i.e., the inner surface of the pipe 510) in a helical path. In a preferred embodiment, the crawler 502 progresses through the pipe 510 such that the ablation site 506 receives 3 passes of the laser.
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The crawler 602 further includes spur gears 618 for rotating the laser head assembly as it progresses through the ablation site 506 of
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The deployment tube 702 is includes a foreign materials exclusion (FME) gate 708 for preventing any foreign materials from traveling in or out of the deployment tube 702 during ablation. The FME gate may be opened when the once the seal is created and may be opened and closed to allow the crawler and laser head assembly to leave and/or return while maintaining radioactive containment within the deployment tube 702. The crawler 602 and laser head assembly 604 of
The deployment system 700 further includes a frame 710, which supports the other components of the deployment system 700. The frame 710 includes a height adjustment 712 which allows deployment to tube to raise or lower aligning the alignment clamp 706 with the pipe access port 702. This alignment promotes a proper seal of the alignment clamp 706 with the pipe access port 702. The frame 710 is mounted on rollers 714 to facilitate the transport of the deployment system 700 to the pipe access port 702.
The deployment system further includes a jib crane 716 which may be used to replace the hose, should the levels of radioactive contamination approach an unacceptable level. The jib crane 716 may have a lift capacity that exceeds the weight of the hose. The hose may have a weight up to 200 lbs, accordingly the jib crane 716 preferably has a lift capacity of at least 1 ton.
The deployment system 700 further includes a cable winch system 718. The cable 720 of the cable winch system is 718 is attached to the crawler 602 of
The deployment system 700 further includes a cable management system 726 for managing the cables 728 which power and service the crawler 602 and laser head assembly 604 of
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The cable management system 802 further includes a first drum servo motor 810 and a second drum servo motor 811 for synchronously rotating the drum 808. As the drum 808 rotates, the cables 804 are spooled or unspooled depending on whether the laser head assembly 210 of
The cable management system 802 includes a slip ring 812 which allows the drum 808 to rotate while the cables 804 maintain connectivity with their respective static continuations exiting the slip ring 812. The slip ring 812 may be rated at a current rating of up to 50 amps. Cables 804 which are not compatible with the couplings of the slip ring 812 and may only experience a torsional strain below a prescribed limit, such as fiber optic cables 804, are managed such that the torsional strain that the cables 804 experience remain within these limits.
The power cables 804 pass through an electrical cabinet 814 at the base of the cable management system 802 which provides organized access to the cables for maintenance. The power cables 804 exit the electrical cabinet 814 and connect to an electrical panel 816. The electrical panel 816 connects the power cables 804 to an external voltage source.
While the above description provides examples of one or more apparatus, methods, or systems, it will be appreciated that other apparatus, methods, or systems may be within the scope of the claims as interpreted by one of skill in the art.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63292911 | Dec 2021 | US |