Various Applications
Because of the fears it inspires, radioactivity is considered in the collective unconscious as hostile to the environment. However, well mastered, it helps to improve it thanks to precious controls.
One example is the air quality and dust content monitoring of factory releases. To measure the degree of dust resulting from these releases, the air is constantly filtered on a ribbon running between a radioactive source and a detector. The intensity of the radiation received by the detector depends on the dust deposited on the filter. This makes it possible to determine this rate and take the necessary measures if the degree of dust is too high.
Radioactive gauges play a similar watchdog role in the coal industry, which accounts for more than half of the world’s electricity production. Some neutron emitting gauges (typically americium-241 and berylium) measure and control the moisture present in coal and coke. Others, which emitting gamma rays, are used to ascertain the composition of the ashes and of the combustion gases coming out of the chimneys. It is important to limit the amount of sulfides and nitrides present in these gases and ashes, because of the negative role these contaminants play in acid rains.
More generally and apart from environmental considerations, it is necessary in many industrial processes to determine the composition of minerals or materials used in products manufacturing. The property of X-ray fluorescence (emission of characteristic X-rays by atoms under the effect of radiation) is often used to this effect. For instance, this helps to guarantee the constant quality of a steel coating or to follow the good progress of a chemical process. A combination of radiation filters can be used to sort the X-rays and facilitate the identification of the atoms present in a complex mixture of minerals or components.
Radioactive sources are used as diagnostic tools during refining operations which constitute an important part of the petroleum industry. As it is difficult to introduce and maintain probes inside the distillation towers whereextreme conditions prevail, gamma probes can be installed outside the towers and moved vertically to follow the liquid levels inside, record the composition of the ingredients at various heights and detect malfunctions.
In geology and in particular for petroleum prospecting, radioactive sources are used for exploring the properties of soils, to measure their density or detect the presence of water or hydrocarbons.
Diagraphy or “well logging” allows to study the geological properties of undergrounds by introducing a probe including a gamma source (cobalt 60, césium 137 …) or a neutrons source (américium-béryllium ou de californium-252). In the first case, the gamma backscattering is used for density and composition measurements, in the second case the slowing down of the neutrons allows to detect the presence of hydrogen.
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