ML20207D528

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Submits,For Approval,Info to Establish Atmospheric Dilution Factor for Determining Permissible Average Concentration of Radioactive Effluent from Reactor Effluent Disposal Stack
ML20207D528
Person / Time
Site: Rhode Island Atomic Energy Commission
Issue date: 04/16/1963
From: Quirk A
RHODE ISLAND, STATE OF
To:
US ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION (AEC)
Shared Package
ML20151U912 List:
References
NUDOCS 8808150377
Download: ML20207D528 (15)


Text

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. I i STAT 8 0F RH0DE ISLED AND PROVIDENCE PfaNTAT10HS j

\ ATO'310 D4EROY COW ISSION Docket Wo. 50-193 April 16, 1963 Chaire.an U. S. Atocic Worgy Coc:misalon Washington 25, D. C.

Attention: Division of Liconemg and Regulatica Gentiamens The Rhode Is1cnd Atcmic Energy Consission (RIAEC) herab7 submits for approval of the U. S. Atcaic Energy Ccmnocion (USA 20) infornticn to establish an ataoophoric dilution factor of 10 se:/n3for determining the permissible average concentration of radiotetivu offluent from the reacter effluent diuposal stack which is 22 inches in diaator and 11$ foot hi; hor t than the surrounding terrain. Such a dilution factor &pplicd to the disposal of cirborne radioutin c:sterLd is eufficient to enaure tJ st the yccr3y eversge concentration of such i n:aterials at all points in unrestricted aron around tho stack, whica cuald be cccupied by individush will not cxceed the mxinam permissible, non. occupational concentrations estub]iched by the USAE04 The inforation which fo11cma 2dicates that dispceal of airborno radioactive ut,orial from a stack which pr<nidce a dilution factor of 10 sec/m3 can to actoly permittod. Tuis factor vill be rogarded as a limit and gases will bc L releauad at a atniuum lovel aft,or c rcib1 monitoring.

the rcactor building ventilatien natcs and the systems for removal of anbient atmosphere undarcoins neutrca batted 2ent, in ths beam ports, dry grm= facility, and allied racctor experinatal facMities,, hys been described provicualy (1,2,3)3 This exhaust syste::) will niao be und for the ruoval of various flauhing gases, t . s o 1. .-

7' -- -- -

L alnfer:mtion Supplied in Rt,spenn to Q:cstiene Ccepiled by the USAEC Regarding the Rhodo Isl nd Atcuiu Energy Ocxaaission Reactor", answere A-3 and A-h, unbmitted to USt.EC on June 29, 1962.

2. "InfcInstion Supplied by the Rhode Island Atenic Energy Coemission to Quostions Cor. piled by the 0.0a Atec.ic Enerry Commiartion", answers item l 11 and attac .eJ non chn.t, ILm 13, cubnitted to USAEC un thy 2,1962.,
3. 87afor.utier. Supplied iy do Op.e s1 dwtric Co,rtpany in !sspunce N Qucsticas 5:W LJ by N "S.M hwcJmg the E%do ktond Atra.ta ! Meg,y Ccudssion Reactc. ", cuuvers lj , % aubchted to USAEC on Wy 2,1962, 8808150377 88080s PDR ADOCK 05000193 P PDC

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' '. : rich us holium requir?A in cetati caporinontal est upa in the ganeral reosarch progrn. hoac gaces . ill to colleevad in a usnifold and after coroful monitoring exhaustad to the exterior of the building through particulata filtors.

These s/ stems will cxht.uot thrcugh a sta<2k 115 foot cbove the currounling terrain by maana of a 4000 cfn bicucro All building venti htica intakes are fittssi with louvers to close them off nutoanticony in the evont of tho necessity of using the building clean-up systor fonc71::3 a reactor incidcat.

In relsasing gaseous cctivity to tho atsoaphoro, the RIAf C realizes ths necccsity of pret3cting inhabitsute of unrostricted t.?cca nur ^he rasctor site fr(c owr c:poeurs due to the stsch offluont. Hovowr, due to diffusion in the atsoaphore and variations in wind opcc. end ditcetion, ernuent concentrations of radioactive gasos in excess of ths kPC cca be aufoly dischersd frow the etzck. It is the purpose of the remaindor of this tn.r.aa.ihl to rovi 214 .o13

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TOTAL 5 35 x 10 sec/m L

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Enc 1 (1) to RIAEC ltr Dated
April, 16, 1963

-l TABLE il PERCENTAGE FREQUENCY OF WIND DIRECTION JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUNE JULY AUG SEPT OCT NOV DE-C SLN SUM /12 N 9 9 7 6 8 3 4 5 6 7 6 5 75 6.25 ffE 7 6 6 8 8 4 3 5 6 8 5 3 69 5.75 PE 3 4 5 4 7 4 3 4 5 6 4 4 53 4.42 EM 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 2 1 16 1.33 E 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 13 1.08 ESE 1 1 2 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 15 1.25 SE 4 3 7 8 12 7 7 7 4 4 3 4 70 5.83 SSE 4 4 4 6 8 8 5 4 5 4 4 3 59 4.92 S 4 5 4 7 5 7 7 7 7 6 6 4 69 5.75 SSW 8 4 6 8 6 12 12 12 11 7 8 7 101 8.42 SW 10 7 5 10 6 14 16 13 13 12 10 10 126 10.50 WSW 7 5 4 6 4 6 8 7 5 6 8 11 77 6.42 W 7 6 6 6 5 7 8 6 6 6 9 10 82 6.83 WNW 11 16 15 8 7 8 7 6 7 7 9 13 114 9.50 NW 13 14 13 10 8 8 7 8 9 9 13 13 125 10.42 fMN 7 11 9 6 6 4 4 6 6 8 7 7 81 6.75 CALM 5 4 3 3 5 4 6 7 7 6 5 3 l t

TABIE III Stability Parameter Wind Velocity iff. Coef. saax n uph C miles

.2 (superadiabatic) 1 39 0.21 5 34 0.12 10 .31 (L12

.25 (adiabatic to 1 .2 0.56 isothermal) 5 .16 0433 10 .15 0 362

.33 (Isother:nal and 1 .1 1.7 alight inversion) 5 .08 1.M

- 10 .M 1.25 L .5 (strong invorsion) 1 .05 0.11 5 .03 %1 10 .02h 0 11 C

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C Enci (III) to RIAEC ltr Dated: April 36, 1963

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EF ST HT 14000 DAVID A B 1 C D l E F G H 1

2 4 delta H H + delta H 5 26.95/COLC COL D^1.4 dxCOLE COL F + 35 COL G - 14.6 6 EFFECTIVE EFFECTIVE 7 WIND SPEED U W/U STACK STACK HGT-

_8 AVG. WIND HEIGHT HGTOFBLOG 9 MILES / HR METERS /SEC METERS /SEC METERS METERS 10 1 0.447 0.45 60.29 310.71 173.62 208.67 194.04 11 1 TO 3 .44 TO 1.32 0.89 30.28 118.48i 66.21 101.26 86.63 12 4 TO 7 1.76 TO 3.08 2.45 11.00 28.70 16.04 51.09 36.46 13 8 TO 12 3.52 TO 5.28 4.47 6.03 12.37 6.91 41.96 27.33 14 13 TO 18 5072 TO 7.92 6.93 3.89 6.70 3.74 38.79 24.16 15 19 TO 24 8.36 TO 10.56 9.61 2.80 4.24 2.37 37.42 22.79 16__

t > 24 > 10.56 10.56 2.55 3.71 2.07 37.12 22.49 17 _. ,

18 19 W - STA.CK DRAFT - 26.95 METERS PER SECOND ~

20 CACS BLDG HGT - 48 FEET = 14.6 METERS [

21 d - DIAMETER OF STACK - 22 IN .5588 METERS Spreadsheet 1

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EF ST HT 14000 BOSANOUET A B l C D E F G 1

2 3

4 delta H 5

E AVERAGE W/U (W/U)^2 .615/ COL D 1.31 - COL E COL FxCOLEx 7 WIND SPEED 3.14y.5588 8 METERS /SEC 9

10 0.447 60.29 3634.98 60.30 0.01 1.30 137.50 11 0.89 30.28 916.93 30.29 0.02 1.29 68.52 12 2.45 11.00 121.00 11.03 0.06 1.25 24.21 13 4.47 6.03 36.35 6.08 0.10 1.21 12.79 14 6.93 3.89 15.12 3.96 0.16 1.15 7.88 15 9.61 2.80 7.86 2.90 0.21 1.10 5.40 16 10.56 2.55 6.51 2.66 0.23 1.08 4.83 Spreadsheet 2

EF ST HT 14000 HOLL A B C D E 1

2 26.95/ COL A 1.5x.5588xCOL B COL C + 35 3

_4 U W/U 5 WIND delta H H + delta H Heff -

6 SPEED BLDG HT 7

8 METERS / SEC 9

10 0.447 60.29 50.54 85.59 70.96 11 0.89 30.28 25.38 60.43 45.80 12 2.45 11.00 9.22 44.27 29.64 13 4.47 6.03 5.05 40.10 25.47 14 6.93 3.89 3.26 38.31 23.68 15 9.61 2.80 2.35 37.40 22.77 16 10.56 2.55 2.14 37.19 22.56 17 18 19 20 delta H = 1.5dW/ava u Spreadsheet 3

a.

L!NE SOURCE 14000 HOLL ,

A B i C l D l E l F i G l H I i J i K 1 .12/ COL A COL B/.01 COL Cx3.7EXP 07 COL E SHEET 3 COL Of4COf. E COL F/400 COL "3x1000 COL HxCOLI - COL Jr.1 2 .

3 4 U 5 AVERAGE UNE SOURCE UNE SOURCE DISTANCE FLUX AT DOSE RATE DOSE RATE FHDUENCY DOSE RATE DOSE RATE ,

6 WIND SPEED STRENGTH STRENGTH UNE TO ECEPTOR MICROR/HR OF WIND COMECTEDFOR COR CTED 7 Nim SPEED Wito SPEED FOR 8 METERS /SEC mci / METER mci /CM D/SEC.CM 04 PHOTONSPER MR/HR DIRECTION 9 SO CM-SEC MICRO R/HR MICRO R/Mt y 0.447 0.27 0.00268456 99328.86 7096 3.50 0.00874867 8.75 0.05 0.44 y 0.89 0.13 0.00134831 49887.64 4580 2.72 0.00680781 6.81 0.093 0.63 12 2.45 0.05 0.0004898 18122.45 2964 1.53 0.00382i37 3.82 0.25 0.96 13 4.47 0.03 0.00026846 9932.89 2547 0.97 0.0024374 2.44 0.0298 0.07 14 6.93 0.02 0.00017316 6406.93 2368 0.68 0.00169102 1.69 0.238 0.40 15 9.61 0.0 : 0.00012487 4620.19 2277 0.51 0.00126817 1.27 0.05 0.06 16 10.56 0.01 0.00011364 4204.55 2256 0.47 0.00116482 1.16 0.013 0.02 17 18 THIS UNE SOURCE CALCULATION IS TAKEN FROM LAMARSH ,PAGE 462 2.58 0.26 19 AND CALCULATES THE PHOTON FLUX AT A RECEP's OR X CM 20 FROM AN INFINITE UNE SOURCE. THE PHOTON FLUX IS THEN CONVERTED 21 TO DOSE RATE IGNORING ATTENUATION DUE TO AIR SCATTERING 22 AND ABSORPTION AND IGNORING BUILD-UP 23 l l l 24 GAMMASSO CM SEC - GAMMAS /CM-SECDNIDED BY 4 TIMES SOdRCE TO RECEPTOR DISTANCE IN CM.

25 l l l 26 IT TAKES 400 GAMMAS /SO CM-SEC TO PRODUCE IMR/HR 27 FOR 1.3 MEV GAMMAS. l }

Spreadsheet 4

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PLUME DOSE 140@ HOLL ,

A I B '

C l D l E l F l G l H f I l J l K 1

2 U S pS 3 AVERAGE PLUME ISUB1 ISUB2 kl SUB 2 ISUB1+ COL G TIMES COL H f DOSE RATE -

4 WIND SPEED CENTERLINE k i SUB 2 F19 DIVIDED BY FREO OF PER UNIT 5 TO RECEPTOR .0073XS WIND SPEED WIND SPEED EMISSION 6 DISTANCE RATE -

7 DavoU/O D/O Dav9/O 8 METERS /SEC METERS 9

10 0.447 70.96 0.52 0.65 0.46 0.506 1.156 6.0276E-06 1.3485E-05 0.05 6.7423E-07 11 0.89 45.8 0.33 1.6 0.82 0.902 2.502 1.3046E-05 1.4658E-05 0.093 1.3632E-06 12 2.45 29.64 0.22 2.4 1 1.1 3.5 1.825E-05 7.4488E-06 0.25 1.8622E-06 13 _

4.47 25.47 0.19 2.6 1 1.1 3.7 1.9292E-05 4.316E-06 0.0298 1.2862E-07 14 6.93 23.68 0.17 2.7 1 1.1 3.8 1.9814E-05 2.8591 E-06 0.238 6.8048E-07 15 9.61 22.77 0.17 2.7 1 1.1 3.8 1.9814E-05 2.0618E-06 0.05 1.0309E-07 16 10.56 22.56 0.16 2.7 1 1.1 3.8 1.9814E-05 1.8763E-06 0.013 2.4392E-08 17 18 TOTAL 4.8362E-06 19 0.1616 0.0073 0.0034 1.3 5.2142E-06 20 21 DIRECTON 22 DavnO X FREQUENCY X O X sects .

23 4.83624E-06 0.1 0.00012 3600 2.0893E-07 RAD /HR 0.00020893 mR/HR Assume pay = .0073 because o = 1 cx =cy = 0 pa = .0034 k = buildup factor = 1.1 for Argon-41, E 7 = 1.3 MEV p = .0073 Y

receptor - (.1616ppah) O(Il + kI2)!11 avg where Il and 12 are from pages 341 and 342 of Meteorology and Atomic Energy, 1968 Spreadsheet 5

MAX GRD CONC 14000 HOLL A B C D E F 1 C=B/A - E=D/C 2

  • 3 f CORRECTED 4 AVERAGE FROM PAGE FREQUENCY FOR WIND -

5 WIND 410 OF WIND SPEED AND 6 SPEED PASQUILL A SPEED FREQUENCY 7 METERS /SEC 8 U Y U/Q y/Q Yavg/Q 9

10 0.447 0.000052 0.00011633 0.05 5.81655E-06 11 0.89 0.0001 0.00011236 0.093 1.04494E-05 12 2.45 0.00018 7.3469E-05 0.25 1.83673E-05 13 4.47 0.00025 5.5928E-05 0.0298 1.66667E-06 14 6.93 0.00027 3.8961 E-05 0 238 9.27273E-06 15 9.61 0.00035 3.642E-05 0.05 1.82102E-06 16 10.56 0.00035 3.3144E-05 0.013 4.30871 E-07 17 .

18 TOTAL 4.78246E-05 19 20 Yavg/Q X DIRECTION X O =

21 4.782462E-05 0.1 0.00012 5.73895E-10 CURIES PER 22 METER CUBED 23 UNRESTRICTED MPC FOR ARGON-41 IS 0.00000004 MICROCURIES / CC 24 262000 5.738955E-10 0.000001 1.3 1.95469E-10 R/SEC 25 7.03688E-07 R/HR 26 0.000703688 mR/HR X = 2.62 x 10 59E R/sec, Lamarsh page 568 where 9is C1/cm3 E is MEV Spreadsheet 6

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