Applications of Atomic Physics
Applications of Atomic Physics
• Nuclear energy now provides about 11% of the world’s electricity from about 450
power reactors.
• Asia's first nuclear reactor is the Apsara Research Reactor situated in Mumbai.
• Tarapur Atomic Power Plant-1 (TAPS-1) is the first Nuclear power plant in India. It is
operational since October 1969 and is situated in Boisar, Maharastra.
NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
• Nuclear Power is the 5th largest source of generating electricity in India after coal,
gas, wind power and Hydroelectric.
• India has 22 nuclear power reactors operating in 7 states, with an installed capacity of
7380 MegaWatt electric (MWe).
(Kalpakkam) Madras Atomic Power Station – 1984 Tamil Nadu NPCIL 440
• The coolant in the primary circuit gets heated by absorbing the heat and enters into
the heat exchanger.
• In a heat exchanger, the feed water is heated and converted into steam by the hot
coolant by means of heat transfer.
• The steam from the heat exchanger enters the turbine and the turbine is connected to
the generator which generates power.
NUCLEAR POWER PLANT
• The steam after doing the work enters into the condenser and converted into the water
which is pumped again to the heat exchanger by the feed pump.
• The hot coolant gets cooled in heat exchanger is recirculated into the reactor by a
coolant circulating pump.
The PWR uses regular simple water as a The BWR is similar to the PWR in
coolant. The cooling water is held at several ways. Although they only have
very high pressure so that it does not one coolant loop. The hot nuclear fuel
boil. It passes through a heat exchanger, boils water as it passes through the top
shifting heat to a secondary coolant of the reactor, where the steam goes to
loop, which then rotates the turbine. the turbine to rotate it.
ADVANTAGES
• The space requirement will be less.
• It consumes a very small quantity of fuel.
• Increased reliability of operation.
• These are not affected by adverse weather conditions.
• The output control is extremely flexible.
• The material expenditure on metal structures is less.
• Required less quantity of water.
• These are most economical in large quantity
DISADVANTAGES
• The initial cost will be high.
• If we don’t dispose of radioactive wastes carefully it may have a bad effect on the
workers health.
APPLICATION OF RADIATION
IN MEDICINE
APPLICATION OF RADIATION
IN MEDICINE
APPLICATION OF RADIATION
IN MEDICINE
Radiotherapy - Radiotherapy means the use of radiation, usually x-rays or gamma rays from
strong cobalt radioisotopes to treat cancer. Radiotherapy can be given from inside the
body, called internal radiotherapy. Or external radiotherapy, which is from outside the body.
• Cosmic rays (high-energy particles from outer space) are mostly absorbed by the atmosphere and
produce radioactivity in the air we breathe, but some reach the Earth’s surface.
• Numerous homes, particularly in Scotland, are built from granite rocks that emit radioactive radon
gas; this can collect in basements or well insulated rooms if the ventilation is poor.
• Radiation is produced in the emissions from nuclear power stations and in fall-out from the testing of
nuclear bombs; the latter produce strontium isotopes with long half-lives which are absorbed by bone.
HARMFUL EFFECTS OF
RADIATION
By about 1920, people realized that radiation from radioactive materials was harmful
to living organisms.
A large number of women who were employed for painting dials of instruments with
luminescent paints containing radium died of bone cancer.
They did not know that they were introducing a harmful substance, radium, into their
body, while tipping the brush with their tongue. The maximum amount of radium
that our body can tolerate is only one-millionth of a gram.
Marie Curie, who (with her husband, Pierre Curie) discovered radium, also died of
the effects of radiation.
Harmful effects of radiation are -
1. Loss of hair
2. Cataract
3. Mouth ulcer
4. Damage to thyroid glands
5. Breast cancer
6. Ulcers in the stomach and intestines
7. Burns in the skin
8. Leukemia (blood cancer)
9. Bone cancer
10. Internal Bleeding
PREVENTIVE MEASURES