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Nuclear Safety

  • Book

  • May 2006
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5798216

Nuclear Safety provides the methods and data needed to evaluate and manage the safety of nuclear facilities and related processes using risk-based safety analysis, and provides readers with the techniques to assess the consequences of radioactive releases.

The book covers relevant international and regional safety criteria (US, IAEA, EUR, PUN, URD, INI). The contents deal with each of the critical components of a nuclear plant, and provide an analysis of the risks arising from a variety of sources, including earthquakes, tornadoes, external impact and human factors. It also deals with the safety of underground nuclear testing and the handling of radioactive waste.

Table of Contents

Introduction.Objectives of nuclear safety.Short history of nuclear safety technology.Inventory and localisation of radioactive products in the plant.Safety systems and their functions.Classification of accidents and description of some examples: Classification; Design basis accidents; Beyond design basis accidents.Severe accidents.Dispersion of radioactive releases.Health consequences of releases.The general approach to the safety of the plant and of the site.Defence in depth.Quality assurance.Safety analysis: Deterministic safety analysis; Probabilistic safety analysis.Safety analysis review.Classification of plant components.Notes on some plant components: The reactor pressure vessel; Piping; Valves; Containers.Resistance of plants to earthquakes.Resistance of plants to tornadoes.Resistance to external impacts.Nuclear safety criteria: General characteristics; The U.S. General design criteria; IAEA criteria; EUR criteria; Other sets of general design criteria.Nuclear safety research.Operating experience: Principal sources; Some notable events; The International Nuclear Event Scale.Underground location of nuclear power plants.Underground nuclear tests.Effects of nuclear explosions.Radioactive waste.Safety of fusion reactors.Safety of specific plants and of other activities.Nuclear plants on satellites.Erroneous beliefs in nuclear safety.When can we say that a particular plant is safe?The limits of nuclear safety: the residual risk.Appendices:Glossary.Web sites.Index.

Authors

Gianni Petrangeli Consultant to the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Association) and researcher for nuclear safety for the European Commission; member of the Faculty Council for the Doctorate in Nuclear and Industrial Safety, University of Pisa, Italy. Dr. Gianni Petrangeli is Consultant to the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Association) for the preparation of nuclear safety guidelines and participation in safety evaluation missions. He is a researcher for nuclear safety for the European Commission and a member of the Faculty Council for the Doctorate in Nuclear and Industrial Safety, University of Pisa, Italy. Dr. Petrangeli spent time as a Professor of Nuclear & Industrial Safety and Environment at the University of Roma, and at the University of Pisa where he received his Doctorate in Nuclear and Industrial Safety and was also a Professor on Complex Safety Systems.