Claims
- 1. In the method for cleansing radioactively contaminated articles in a sealed cleaning chamber in which the articles are manipulated therethrough during the cleaning steps so as to facilitate the dislodging and dissolving of the contaminants, all while maintaining physical integrity of the chamber against escape of radioactive gases, comprising the steps of:
- sealing the contaminated articles in a cleaning chamber;
- spraying the contaminated articles in the cleaning chamber with a clean solvent at an elevated pressure greater than atmospheric to thereby dislodge and dissolve the contaminant and clean the articles while simultaneously exhausting the air from the chamber to produce a sub-atmospheric pressure in the chamber while introducing solvent to the chamber;
- washing the articles with clean solvent under low pressure and high volume relative to the solvent sprayed on the articles at elevated pressure;
- simultaneously draining, while spraying, the contaminated solvent under pressure less than atmospheric from the cleaning chamber thus substantially precluding breach of the seal of the chamber and escape of radioactive gas or liquid due to the spraying of solvent at an elevated pressure greater than atmospheric;
- said draining step being conducted at a rate at least as great as that which the clean solvent is introduced into the cleaning chamber, whereby substantially no contaminated solvent is collected therein; and
- decontaminating the contaminated solvent drained from the cleaning chamber for reuse in the spraying steps;
- collecting in a solvent reservoir the contaminated solvent drained from the cleaning chamber;
- withdrawing solvent from the solvent reservoir so as to cleanse the solvent;
- filtering the solvent withdrawn from the solvent reservoir to remove substantially all particulate contaminant suspended therein; and
- returning the filtered solvent into the solvent reservoir;
- said withdrawing and filtering steps including pumping said solvent from the solvent reservoir through a filter at a volume substantially greater and a pressure substantially lower than the solvent sprayed on the articles to thereby enhance integrity of the filtration system, also.
- 2. The method of claim 1 wherein that solvent conducted to the cleaning chamber under high pressure and low volume becomes partially vaporized due to said high pressure upon entry thereinto;
- continually withdrawing said vapors from the chamber to both prevent pressure surge and draw contaminated vapor to a condenser;
- condensing the contaminated solvent component in vapor form; and
- conducting the solvent in liquid form from the condenser to the reservoir so that it may be recirculated at said low pressure high volume condition.
- 3. The method as claimed in claim 1 including the steps of:
- withdrawing a part of the solvent after it has been filtered and pumping it at said elevated pressure and low volume to the cleaning chamber to perform said spraying step, while conducting the remainder of the solvent originally pumped to the filter at said high volume and said pressure lower than said spraying pressure back to the aforesaid reservoir.
- 4. The method as claimed in claim 1, including the further step of:
- periodically distilling the filtered solvent to remove dissolved contaminants therefrom.
- 5. The method as claimed in claim 4, wherein the distilling step includes the steps of:
- evaporating the filtered solvent;
- condensing the evaporated solvent;
- separating the condensed solvent from any water condensed therewith;
- and returning the separated solvent to the solvent reservoir.
- 6. The method as claimed in claim 1, including:
- withdrawing gases from the cleaning chamber, together with the contaminated solvent;
- liquifying the solvent vapor in the gases withdrawn from the cleaning chamber;
- removing from the gases after the liquifying step substantially all particulate matter suspended therein;
- and removing from the gases substantially all solvent vapor not liquified during the liquification step.
- 7. The method for cleansing radioactively contaminated articles in a chamber in which the articles are manipulated therethrough during the cleaning steps so as to facilitate the dislodging and dissolving of the contaminants while simultaneously exhausting air from the chamber, the chamber being coupled to a solvent recirculation circuit, all defining a system wherein solvent is sprayed onto the articles in the chamber at a first elevated pressure at low volume, and recirculated and cleansed of contamination at a second substantially lower pressure in order to reduce the high pressure forces otherwise contained within the chamber and recirculation circuit of the system and thus enhance safety during cleansing by subjecting the parts thereof to less stress, comprising the steps of:
- spraying a radioactively contaminated article in a closed chamber with a liquid solvent under a first elevated pressure and during which a portion of the pressurized solvent becomes vaporized upon entry into the expanded volume of the chamber;
- withdrawing the contaminated liquid-vapor solvent under a second, substantially lower pressure than said first elevated pressure and conducting the solvent under said lower pressure to a particulate trap where macroscopic particles are removed from the solvent while simultaneously reducing pressure surge in the chamber;
- chilling the vaoor component of the solvent to liquify it and conducting the liquified solvent to a reservoir while conducting residual vapor back to the chamber;
- conducting solvent at such second and lower pressure from said reservoir through a filter system to cleanse said solvent, thus insuring both integrity of the filter and the liquid character of the solvent so as to thereby reduce the possibility of escape of radioactive contaminant from the chamber and circuit; and
- conducting a part of the solvent stream emanating from said filter into a high pressure pump to supply solvent thereafter to said first elevated pressure low volume spray in said chamber while the balance of the solvent emanating the filter is returned at said second lower pressure to the solvent reservoir.
- 8. The method of claim 7, including the additional step of heating the solvent in the recirculation circuit and conveying it in vapor phase through said chilling step as hereabove described and at said second pressure level.
Parent Case Info
This is a continuation-in-part of co-pending U.S. application, Ser. No. 080,474, filed Oct. 1, 1979, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (3)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
Country |
747970 |
Aug 1970 |
BEX |
2756145 |
Jun 1979 |
DEX |
2840138 |
Mar 1980 |
DEX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
E. Hollister, "Handling Radioactive Materials", G. E. Review, 1955, pp. 46-52. |
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
80474 |
Oct 1979 |
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