Radiological protection in geological disposal of long-lived solid radioactive waste
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Bibliographic Information
Radiological protection in geological disposal of long-lived solid radioactive waste
(ICRP publication, 122)(Annals of the ICRP, v. 42 no. 3)
Published for the International Commission on Radiological Protection by Elsevier, 2013
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
This report updates and consolidates previous recommendations of the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) related to solid waste disposal. The recommendations given apply specifically to geological disposal of long-lived solid radioactive waste. The report explains how the ICRP system of radiological protection described in Publication 103 can be applied in the context of the geological disposal of long-lived solid radioactive waste. Although the report is written as a standalone document, previous ICRP recommendations not dealt with in depth in the report are still valid.
Table of Contents
EDITORIAL PREFACE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY GLOSSARY 1. INTRODUCTION 2. SCOPE OF THIS REPORT 3. BASIC CONCEPTS AND GOALS UNDERLYING PROTECTION FOR A GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL OF RADIOACTIVE WASTE 3.1. Concepts underlying the ICRP principles for protecting future generations 3.1.1. Basic concepts for the protection of future generations 3.1.2. Basic ICRP principles dealing with future generations 3.2. Geological disposal: objective and implementation steps 3.2.1. Strategies for the management of long-lived solid radioactive waste 3.2.2. Phases of a disposal facility and the safety analysis process 3.2.3. Relevant timeframes for radiological protection 4. APPLICATION OF THE ICRP SYSTEM OF PROTECTION DURING DIFFERENT TIMEFRAMES IN THE LIFE OF A GEOLOGICAL DISPOSAL FACILITY 4.1. The application of the principles "justification", "limitation", and "optimisation" 4.2. Dose and risk concepts 4.3. Exposure situations associated with geological disposal 4.3.1. Exposure Situations for the Operational Phase 4.3.2. Exposure Situations for the Post-Operational Phase 4.3.3. Natural disruptive events 4.3.4. Inadvertent human intrusion 4.3.5. Summary of relevant exposure situation according oversight 4.4. Optimisation, Best Available Techniques and management principles 4.4.1. Optimisation and Best Available Techniques 4.4.2. Technical and management principles and requirements 5. ENDPOINT CONSIDERATIONS 5.1 The Representative Person 5.2. Protection of the environment 6. CONCLUSION REFERENCES
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