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{{#Wiki_filter:1Exhibit NWMI-004-R1Northwest Medical Isotopes, LLC Radioisotope Production Facility OverviewJanuary 23, 2018U.S. Nuclear Regulatory CommissionCommission Mandatory Meeting 2Exhibit NWMI-004-RNWMI MissionFabricatedTargetsIrradiation services supplier99MosupplierTechnetium generator supplier99mTcsupplierIrradiatedtargetsCaptive Network of University Research ReactorsReliability/assurance of supplyMultiple shipments/weekRadioisotope Production Facility (RPF)Fabrication of LEU targets99Mo productionUranium recycle and recoveryDomestic 99Mo Generator DistributorsHold FDA Drug Master FileNo changes to generatorsNo changes to supply chain99MoTechnetium generators99mTcradiopharmaceuticalsAssure a Domestic, Secure, and Reliable Supply of Molybdenum-99 (99Mo)  End User 3Exhibit NWMI-004-RPrimary AssumptionsSingle radioisotope production facility RPFRPF includes target fabrication, 99Mo production, and uranium recycle and recovery99Mo produced by a fission-based method using LEUNominal capacity 3,500 6-day curies (Ci); surge capacity of 1,500 6-day CiUse network of university reactorsSame target design used for all reactors Intellectual property obtainedU.S., Australia, Russia, South Africa, Korea, Europe AllowedIndia, China PendingFission product releases will comply with environmental release criteriaGenerate Class A, B, and C wastes; no greater than Class C (GTCC) waste 4Exhibit NWMI-004-RSite Location and DescriptionSite located within Discovery Ridge Research Park 550 acreUniversity of Missouri (MU)-owned research park in Columbia Boone County, MissouriDiscovery Ridge located in central Missouri ~125miles east of Kansas City and ~125miles west of St.Louis4.5miles south of Interstate-70 andjust to north of USHighway633.5miles to southeast of main MU campus9.5miles west of Missouri RiverRPF will be located on Lot 15 7.4-acre No existing structuresUsed for agriculture for past centuryecosystem; two existing companies 5Exhibit NWMI-004-RLicensing ApproachLicense Request:NWMI has submitted a Construction Permit Application to obtain a license for a production facility under Title10,Code of Federal Regulations,Part50 (10CFRUsing guidance in NUREG-1537, Guidelines for Preparing and Reviewing Applications for the Licensing of Non-Power Reactors Format and ContentProposed Action:Issuance of an NRC license under 10CFR50 that would authorize NWMI to construct and operate a 99Mo RPF at a site located in Columbia, MissouriRPF will:Receive irradiated low-enriched uranium (LEU) targets (from a network of university research or test reactors)Process irradiated LEU targets for dissolution, recovery, and purification of 99MoRecover and recycle LEU to minimize radioactive, mixed, and hazardous waste generationTreat/package wastes generated by RPF process steps to enable transport to a disposal siteProvide areas for associated laboratory and other support activities 6Exhibit NWMI-004-RAdditional RPF Licensing ActivitiesAdditional RPF operational activities are subject to other NRC regulations10CFRtransfer special nuclear materialReceiving LEU from U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)Producing LEU target materials and fabrication of targets10CFRprocess and transport 99Mo for medical applicationsHandling of byproduct materialUniversity reactor(s) and cask licensee(s) will amendtheir current operatinglicenses 7Exhibit NWMI-004-RProposed Schedule (Calendar Year)Start date of site preparation/construction Q22018End date of construction Q32019Start date of facility startup and cold commissioning (pre-operational) Q42019Date of hot commissioning and commercial operations Q1 2020Date of decommissioning: 2050 8Exhibit NWMI-004-RRPF Operating CharacteristicsLEU target material is fabricated (both fresh LEU and recycled U)LEU target material encapsulated using metal cladding LEU targetLEU targets are packaged and shipped to university reactors for irradiationAfter irradiation, targets are shipped back to RPFIrradiated LEU targets disassembledIrradiated LEU targets dissolved into a solution for processingDissolved LEU solution is processed to recover and purify 99MoPurified 99Mo is packaged/shipped to a radiopharmaceutical distributorLEU solution is treated to recover U and is recycled back to Step1Irradiate Targets in ReactorLEU Target Material ProductionEncapsulationIrradiated Target DisassemblyTarget DissolutionMo Recovery and PurificationUranium Recovery and RecycleMo Product PackagingFreshBlendedUraniumProduct Cask Shipments to CustomerUnirradiated Target Shipping to University ReactorsIrradiated Target Shipping and ReceivingPurified U SolutionImpure U SolutionPurified 99Mo SolutionTarget Cladding to Solid Waste HandlingDissolved TargetsFission Product Solution to Liquid Waste HandlingOffgas treatment and release to stack via Primary VentilationLegendReactor OperationsRPF OperationsTarget PackagingTarget Fabrication99Mo ProductionIrradiated Target Disassembly and Dissolution2013-021_010r4 9Exhibit NWMI-004-RRPF Operating Characteristics (continued)Ventilation SystemVentilation system will be divided into four zones (ZoneI, ZoneII, Zone III, and ZoneIV) with airflow directed from lowest to highest potential for contaminationZone I ventilation system will be initial confinement barrier (e.g., gloveboxes, tank hot cell, processing hot cells, and ZoneI exhaust subsystem)Biological ShieldProvides an integrated system of features that protects workers from high-dose radiation generated during facility operationsWill withstand seismic and other concurrent loads, while maintaining containment and shielding during a design basis eventPrimary function is to reduce radiation dose rates and accumulated doses in occupied areas to not exceed limits of 10CFR20 and RPF ALARA guidelines programEngineered Safety Features (ESF)Active or passive features designed to mitigate consequences of accidents and to keep radiological exposures to workers, the public, and environment within acceptable valuesConfinement is considered a general ESF 10Exhibit NWMI-004-RReagent, Product, and Waste Summary Flow Diagram 11Exhibit NWMI-004-RRPF DescriptionFirst level footprint ~52,000square feet (ft2)Target fabrication areaHot cell processing area (dissolution, 99Mo, and 235U recovery)Waste management, laboratory, and utility areasBasement ~2,000 ft2(tank hot cell, decay vault)Second level ~17,000 ft2(utility, ventilation, offgas equipment)Waste Management Building ~1,200 ft2Administration Building (outside secured RPF area) ~10,000 ft2High bay roof 65 ftMechanical area, second floor 46 ftTop of exhaust stack 75 ftLoading dock (back) roof 20 ftSupport and admin (front) roof 12 ftDepth below grade for hot cell/high-integrity container (HIC) storage 15 ft 12Exhibit NWMI-004-RRPF Consequences and Radionuclide Inventory SummaryPrimary consequences resulting from operation of RPF operations are radiologicalLEU target material production/fabricationIrradiated LEU target material processing (e.g., extract 99Mo and recycle and recover 235U)Radioactive waste materials processingRPF radionuclide inventory is based on a weekly throughputof irradiated targets MURR 8 targetsOSTR 30 targets Maximum radionuclide inventoryis based on accumulation in various systems dependent onprocess material decay times>100K Ci>50K Ci>10K Ci<10K CiLegend< 40 hr EOI> 40 hr EOI 13Exhibit NWMI-004-RTransportationFresh LEU ES-3100 package (Certificate of Compliance No.9315)Unirradiated targetsES-3100 or similar package Irradiated targetsBEA Research Reactor cask or similar (Certificate of Compliance No.9341)99Mo product Medical Isotope Depleted Uranium Shielded (MIDUS) TypeB(U) container (Certificate of Compliance USA/9320/B(U)-96) Radioactive waste High-dose radioactive waste High integrity casks (e.g., Model 10-160B cask)Low-dose radioactive waste 208liter (L) (55-gallon [gal]) waste drumsContact-handled waste Standard industrial waste drums or other appropriate [<2millisievert (mSv)/hr (200millirem [mrem]/hr) on contact and 0.1mSv/hr (10mrem/hr) at 1meter (m) (3.3ft)]
{{#Wiki_filter:Exhibit NWMI-004-R U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Commission Mandatory Meeting Northwest Medical Isotopes, LLC Radioisotope Production Facility Overview January 23, 2018 11
14Exhibit NWMI-004-RQuality Assurance Program PlanNWMI Quality Assurance Program Plan (QAPP) describes policies and requirements necessary to meet applicable Federal regulationsANSI/ANS 15.8, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research ReactorsRegulatory Guide2.5, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research and Test Reactors10CFR70.64(a)(1), Quality Standards and RecordsQAPP applies to all nuclear, quality-related projects and activities that require conformance to a nuclear quality assurance (QA) programNWMI RPF Organization 15Exhibit NWMI-004-RQuestions?
 
}}
Exhibit NWMI-004-R NWMI Mission Assure a Domestic, Secure, and Reliable Supply of Molybdenum-99 (99Mo)
Irradiated targets Technetium              99mTc generators        radiopharmaceuticals 99Mo Irradiation                                                                            99mTc services                             99Mo Technetium                                      End User supplier supplier                          supplier          generator supplier Fabricated Targets Captive Network of University     Radioisotope Production Facility             Domestic 99Mo Generator Research Reactors                    (RPF)                                           Distributors
  - Reliability/assurance of supply    - Fabrication of LEU targets                    - Hold FDA Drug Master File
  - Multiple shipments/week            - 99Mo production                                - No changes to generators
                                      - Uranium recycle and recovery                  - No changes to supply chain 2
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Primary Assumptions Single radioisotope production facility RPF
  - RPF includes target fabrication, 99Mo production, and uranium recycle and recovery
  - 99Mo produced by a fission-based method using LEU
  - Nominal capacity 3,500 6-day curies (Ci); surge capacity of 1,500 6-day Ci Use network of university reactors
  - Same target design used for all reactors
  - Intellectual property obtained
* U.S., Australia, Russia, South Africa, Korea, Europe Allowed
* India, China Pending Fission product releases will comply with environmental release criteria Generate Class A, B, and C wastes; no greater than Class C (GTCC) waste 3
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Site Location and Description Site located within Discovery Ridge Research Park 550 acre
  - University of Missouri (MU)-owned research park in Columbia - Boone County, Missouri Discovery Ridge located in central Missouri
  - ~125 miles east of Kansas City and
      ~125 miles west of St. Louis
  - 4.5 miles south of Interstate-70 and just to north of US Highway 63
  - 3.5 miles to southeast of main MU campus
  - 9.5 miles west of Missouri River RPF will be located on Lot 15 7.4-acre
  - No existing structures
  - Used for agriculture for past century NWMI anchor for radioisotope ecosystem; two existing companies 4
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Licensing Approach License Request: NWMI has submitted a Construction Permit Application to obtain a license for a production facility under Title 10, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 50 (10 CFR 50), Domestic Licensing of Production and Utilization Facilities
  - Using guidance in NUREG-1537, Guidelines for Preparing and Reviewing Applications for the Licensing of Non-Power Reactors - Format and Content Proposed Action: Issuance of an NRC license under 10 CFR 50 that would authorize NWMI to construct and operate a 99Mo RPF at a site located in Columbia, Missouri RPF will:
  - Receive irradiated low-enriched uranium (LEU) targets (from a network of university research or test reactors)
  - Process irradiated LEU targets for dissolution, recovery, and purification of 99Mo
  - Recover and recycle LEU to minimize radioactive, mixed, and hazardous waste generation
  - Treat/package wastes generated by RPF process steps to enable transport to a disposal site
  - Provide areas for associated laboratory and other support activities 5
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Additional RPF Licensing Activities Additional RPF operational activities are subject to other NRC regulations
  - 10 CFR 70, Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material, to receive, possess, use, and transfer special nuclear material
* Receiving LEU from U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
* Producing LEU target materials and fabrication of targets
  - 10 CFR 30, Rules of General Applicability to Domestic Licensing of Byproduct Material, to process and transport 99Mo for medical applications
* Handling of byproduct material University reactor(s) and cask licensee(s) will amend their current operating licenses 6
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Proposed Schedule (Calendar Year)
Start date of site preparation/construction Q2 2018 End date of construction Q3 2019 Start date of facility startup and cold commissioning (pre-operational) Q4 2019 Date of hot commissioning and commercial operations Q1 2020 Date of decommissioning: 2050 7
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Operating Characteristics Irradiated Target Disassembly Irradiate Targets in Reactor Target Fabrication                                                                                  and Dissolution                          LEU target material is fabricated (both fresh LEU and recycled U)
Target                                                                                            Irradiated Target Target Cladding to LEU target material encapsulated Packaging        Unirradiated Target                                    Irradiated Target Shipping and Disassembly              Solid Waste  using metal cladding LEU target Shipping to                                                                                            Handling Receiving University Reactors LEU targets are packaged and shipped to university reactors for Encapsulation                                                                                                                                irradiation After irradiation, targets are shipped back to RPF LEU Target                      Uranium                        Mo Recovery Fresh Blended      Material                    Recovery and                            and Target                            Irradiated LEU targets disassembled Purified U                          Impure U                        Dissolved      Dissolution Uranium    Production                        Recycle                        Purification Solution                            Solution                          Targets 2013-021_010r4 Irradiated LEU targets dissolved into Purified 99Mo a solution for processing Fission Product Solution to Liquid Waste Handling                          Solution Mo Product Offgas treatment and release to stack via Primary                    Dissolved LEU solution is processed Packaging                            Ventilation to recover and purify 99Mo Purified 99Mo is packaged/shipped Legend Product Cask                                                            to a radiopharmaceutical distributor Reactor Operations                                            Shipments to RPF Operations Customer LEU solution is treated to recover U 99Mo  Production                                                            and is recycled back to Step 1 8
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Operating Characteristics (continued)
Ventilation System
  - Ventilation system will be divided into four zones (Zone I, Zone II, Zone III, and Zone IV) with airflow directed from lowest to highest potential for contamination
  - Zone I ventilation system will be initial confinement barrier (e.g., gloveboxes, tank hot cell, processing hot cells, and Zone I exhaust subsystem)
Biological Shield
  - Provides an integrated system of features that protects workers from high-dose radiation generated during facility operations
  - Will withstand seismic and other concurrent loads, while maintaining containment and shielding during a design basis event
  - Primary function is to reduce radiation dose rates and accumulated doses in occupied areas to not exceed limits of 10 CFR 20 and RPF ALARA guidelines program Engineered Safety Features (ESF)
  - Active or passive features designed to mitigate consequences of accidents and to keep radiological exposures to workers, the public, and environment within acceptable values
  - Confinement is considered a general ESF 9
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Reagent, Product, and Waste Summary Flow Diagram 10
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Description First level footprint ~52,000 square feet (ft2)                   High bay roof - 65 ft
  - Target fabrication area
  - Hot cell processing area (dissolution, 99Mo, and 235U recovery)
Mechanical area, second floor - 46 ft
  - Waste management, laboratory, and utility areas                  Top of exhaust stack - 75 ft Basement ~2,000 ft2 (tank hot cell, decay vault)                   Loading dock (back) roof - 20 ft Second level ~17,000 ft2 (utility, ventilation, offgas equipment) Support and admin (front) roof - 12 ft Waste Management Building ~1,200 ft2                              Depth below grade for hot cell/high-integrity Administration Building (outside secured RPF area) ~10,000 ft2      container (HIC) storage - 15 ft 11
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Consequences and Radionuclide Inventory Summary Primary consequences resulting from operation of RPF operations are radiological
  - LEU target material production/fabrication
  - Irradiated LEU target material processing (e.g., extract 99Mo and recycle and recover 235U)
  - Radioactive waste materials processing RPF radionuclide inventory is based on a weekly throughput                                                        < 40 hr EOI of irradiated targets
  - MURR 8 targets                                                                      Legend
  - OSTR  30 targets                                                                                 >100K Ci
                                                                                                        >50K Ci Maximum radionuclide inventory                                                                        >10K Ci
                                                                                                        <10K Ci is based on accumulation in various systems dependent on process material decay times
                                                                                      > 40 hr EOI 12
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Transportation Fresh LEU
  - ES-3100 package (Certificate of Compliance No. 9315)
Unirradiated targets
  - ES-3100 or similar package Irradiated targets
  - BEA Research Reactor cask or similar (Certificate of Compliance No. 9341) 99Mo product
  - Medical Isotope Depleted Uranium Shielded (MIDUS) Type B(U) container (Certificate of Compliance USA/9320/B(U)-96)
Radioactive waste
  - High-dose radioactive waste High integrity casks (e.g., Model 10-160B cask)
  - Low-dose radioactive waste 208 liter (L) (55-gallon [gal]) waste drums Contact-handled waste
  - Standard industrial waste drums or other appropriate [<2 millisievert (mSv)/hr (200 millirem [mrem]/hr) on contact and 0.1 mSv/hr (10 mrem/hr) at 1 meter (m) (3.3 ft)]
13
 
Exhibit NWMI-004-R Quality Assurance Program Plan NWMI Quality Assurance Program Plan (QAPP) describes policies and requirements necessary to meet applicable Federal regulations
  - ANSI/ANS 15.8, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research Reactors
  - Regulatory Guide 2.5, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research and Test Reactors
  - 10 CFR 70.64(a)(1), Quality Standards and Records QAPP applies to all nuclear, quality-related projects and activities that require conformance to a nuclear quality assurance (QA) program NWMI RPF Organization 14
 
Questions?
Exhibit NWMI-004-R 15}}

Latest revision as of 05:35, 22 October 2019

NWMI-004-R - Northwest Medical Isotopes, LLC Presentation Slides: Overview Presentation
ML18016A964
Person / Time
Site: Northwest Medical Isotopes
Issue date: 01/23/2018
From:
Northwest Medical Isotopes
To:
NRC/OGC
SECY RAS
References
50-609-CP, Construction Permit Mndtry Hrg, RAS 54171
Download: ML18016A964 (15)


Text

Exhibit NWMI-004-R U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Commission Mandatory Meeting Northwest Medical Isotopes, LLC Radioisotope Production Facility Overview January 23, 2018 11

Exhibit NWMI-004-R NWMI Mission Assure a Domestic, Secure, and Reliable Supply of Molybdenum-99 (99Mo)

Irradiated targets Technetium 99mTc generators radiopharmaceuticals 99Mo Irradiation 99mTc services 99Mo Technetium End User supplier supplier supplier generator supplier Fabricated Targets Captive Network of University Radioisotope Production Facility Domestic 99Mo Generator Research Reactors (RPF) Distributors

- Reliability/assurance of supply - Fabrication of LEU targets - Hold FDA Drug Master File

- Multiple shipments/week - 99Mo production - No changes to generators

- Uranium recycle and recovery - No changes to supply chain 2

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Primary Assumptions Single radioisotope production facility RPF

- RPF includes target fabrication, 99Mo production, and uranium recycle and recovery

- 99Mo produced by a fission-based method using LEU

- Nominal capacity 3,500 6-day curies (Ci); surge capacity of 1,500 6-day Ci Use network of university reactors

- Same target design used for all reactors

- Intellectual property obtained

  • U.S., Australia, Russia, South Africa, Korea, Europe Allowed
  • India, China Pending Fission product releases will comply with environmental release criteria Generate Class A, B, and C wastes; no greater than Class C (GTCC) waste 3

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Site Location and Description Site located within Discovery Ridge Research Park 550 acre

- University of Missouri (MU)-owned research park in Columbia - Boone County, Missouri Discovery Ridge located in central Missouri

- ~125 miles east of Kansas City and

~125 miles west of St. Louis

- 4.5 miles south of Interstate-70 and just to north of US Highway 63

- 3.5 miles to southeast of main MU campus

- 9.5 miles west of Missouri River RPF will be located on Lot 15 7.4-acre

- No existing structures

- Used for agriculture for past century NWMI anchor for radioisotope ecosystem; two existing companies 4

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Licensing Approach License Request: NWMI has submitted a Construction Permit Application to obtain a license for a production facility under Title 10, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 50 (10 CFR 50), Domestic Licensing of Production and Utilization Facilities

- Using guidance in NUREG-1537, Guidelines for Preparing and Reviewing Applications for the Licensing of Non-Power Reactors - Format and Content Proposed Action: Issuance of an NRC license under 10 CFR 50 that would authorize NWMI to construct and operate a 99Mo RPF at a site located in Columbia, Missouri RPF will:

- Receive irradiated low-enriched uranium (LEU) targets (from a network of university research or test reactors)

- Process irradiated LEU targets for dissolution, recovery, and purification of 99Mo

- Recover and recycle LEU to minimize radioactive, mixed, and hazardous waste generation

- Treat/package wastes generated by RPF process steps to enable transport to a disposal site

- Provide areas for associated laboratory and other support activities 5

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Additional RPF Licensing Activities Additional RPF operational activities are subject to other NRC regulations

- 10 CFR 70, Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material, to receive, possess, use, and transfer special nuclear material

  • Receiving LEU from U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
  • Producing LEU target materials and fabrication of targets

- 10 CFR 30, Rules of General Applicability to Domestic Licensing of Byproduct Material, to process and transport 99Mo for medical applications

  • Handling of byproduct material University reactor(s) and cask licensee(s) will amend their current operating licenses 6

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Proposed Schedule (Calendar Year)

Start date of site preparation/construction Q2 2018 End date of construction Q3 2019 Start date of facility startup and cold commissioning (pre-operational) Q4 2019 Date of hot commissioning and commercial operations Q1 2020 Date of decommissioning: 2050 7

Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Operating Characteristics Irradiated Target Disassembly Irradiate Targets in Reactor Target Fabrication and Dissolution LEU target material is fabricated (both fresh LEU and recycled U)

Target Irradiated Target Target Cladding to LEU target material encapsulated Packaging Unirradiated Target Irradiated Target Shipping and Disassembly Solid Waste using metal cladding LEU target Shipping to Handling Receiving University Reactors LEU targets are packaged and shipped to university reactors for Encapsulation irradiation After irradiation, targets are shipped back to RPF LEU Target Uranium Mo Recovery Fresh Blended Material Recovery and and Target Irradiated LEU targets disassembled Purified U Impure U Dissolved Dissolution Uranium Production Recycle Purification Solution Solution Targets 2013-021_010r4 Irradiated LEU targets dissolved into Purified 99Mo a solution for processing Fission Product Solution to Liquid Waste Handling Solution Mo Product Offgas treatment and release to stack via Primary Dissolved LEU solution is processed Packaging Ventilation to recover and purify 99Mo Purified 99Mo is packaged/shipped Legend Product Cask to a radiopharmaceutical distributor Reactor Operations Shipments to RPF Operations Customer LEU solution is treated to recover U 99Mo Production and is recycled back to Step 1 8

Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Operating Characteristics (continued)

Ventilation System

- Ventilation system will be divided into four zones (Zone I, Zone II, Zone III, and Zone IV) with airflow directed from lowest to highest potential for contamination

- Zone I ventilation system will be initial confinement barrier (e.g., gloveboxes, tank hot cell, processing hot cells, and Zone I exhaust subsystem)

Biological Shield

- Provides an integrated system of features that protects workers from high-dose radiation generated during facility operations

- Will withstand seismic and other concurrent loads, while maintaining containment and shielding during a design basis event

- Primary function is to reduce radiation dose rates and accumulated doses in occupied areas to not exceed limits of 10 CFR 20 and RPF ALARA guidelines program Engineered Safety Features (ESF)

- Active or passive features designed to mitigate consequences of accidents and to keep radiological exposures to workers, the public, and environment within acceptable values

- Confinement is considered a general ESF 9

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Reagent, Product, and Waste Summary Flow Diagram 10

Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Description First level footprint ~52,000 square feet (ft2) High bay roof - 65 ft

- Target fabrication area

- Hot cell processing area (dissolution, 99Mo, and 235U recovery)

Mechanical area, second floor - 46 ft

- Waste management, laboratory, and utility areas Top of exhaust stack - 75 ft Basement ~2,000 ft2 (tank hot cell, decay vault) Loading dock (back) roof - 20 ft Second level ~17,000 ft2 (utility, ventilation, offgas equipment) Support and admin (front) roof - 12 ft Waste Management Building ~1,200 ft2 Depth below grade for hot cell/high-integrity Administration Building (outside secured RPF area) ~10,000 ft2 container (HIC) storage - 15 ft 11

Exhibit NWMI-004-R RPF Consequences and Radionuclide Inventory Summary Primary consequences resulting from operation of RPF operations are radiological

- LEU target material production/fabrication

- Irradiated LEU target material processing (e.g., extract 99Mo and recycle and recover 235U)

- Radioactive waste materials processing RPF radionuclide inventory is based on a weekly throughput < 40 hr EOI of irradiated targets

- MURR 8 targets Legend

- OSTR 30 targets >100K Ci

>50K Ci Maximum radionuclide inventory >10K Ci

<10K Ci is based on accumulation in various systems dependent on process material decay times

> 40 hr EOI 12

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Transportation Fresh LEU

- ES-3100 package (Certificate of Compliance No. 9315)

Unirradiated targets

- ES-3100 or similar package Irradiated targets

- BEA Research Reactor cask or similar (Certificate of Compliance No. 9341) 99Mo product

- Medical Isotope Depleted Uranium Shielded (MIDUS) Type B(U) container (Certificate of Compliance USA/9320/B(U)-96)

Radioactive waste

- High-dose radioactive waste High integrity casks (e.g., Model 10-160B cask)

- Low-dose radioactive waste 208 liter (L) (55-gallon [gal]) waste drums Contact-handled waste

- Standard industrial waste drums or other appropriate [<2 millisievert (mSv)/hr (200 millirem [mrem]/hr) on contact and 0.1 mSv/hr (10 mrem/hr) at 1 meter (m) (3.3 ft)]

13

Exhibit NWMI-004-R Quality Assurance Program Plan NWMI Quality Assurance Program Plan (QAPP) describes policies and requirements necessary to meet applicable Federal regulations

- ANSI/ANS 15.8, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research Reactors

- Regulatory Guide 2.5, Quality Assurance Program Requirements for Research and Test Reactors

- 10 CFR 70.64(a)(1), Quality Standards and Records QAPP applies to all nuclear, quality-related projects and activities that require conformance to a nuclear quality assurance (QA) program NWMI RPF Organization 14

Questions?

Exhibit NWMI-004-R 15