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AbstractAbstract
[en] An increasing number of countries are using nuclear materials which, because of their high value and the potential hazards involved, require special methods of handling. To discuss these and to provide a forum at which different systems for achieving the necessary economy and safety could be compared, the International Atomic Energy Agency held a Symposium at Vienna on Nuclear Materials Management from 30 August to 3 September, 1965. It was attended by 115 participants from 19 Member States and two international organizations. Nuclear materials are already being used on an industrial scale and their high cost demands close and continuous control to ensure that they are delivered precisely on time and that they are used to the fullest possible extent before they are withdrawn from service. Routine industrial methods of material control and verification are widely used to ensure safe and economical operation and handling in nuclear power stations, in fuel-element fabrication and reprocessing plants, and in storage facilities. In addition special refinements are needed to take account of the value and the degree of purity required of nuclear materials. Quality as well as quantity has to be checked thoroughly and the utmost economy in processing is necessary. The radioactivity of the material poses special problems of handling and storage and creates a potential hazard to health. A further problem is that of criticality. These dangers and the means of averting them are well understood, as is evidenced by the outstandingly good safety record of the atomic energy industry. But besides accommodating all these special problems, day-to-day procedures must be simple enough to fit in with industrial conditions. Many of the 58 papers presented at the Symposium emphasized that records, checks, measurements and handling precautions, if suitably devised, provide the control vital to efficient operation, serve as checks against loss or waste of valuable materials and help meet the demands for safety. The topics discussed included material control systems, recording and reporting techniques, sampling, analysis arid physical measurement, determination of production and consumption of fissile materials in reactors and various considerations of safety and economic management
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Source
Proceedings Series; Feb 1966; 905 p; IAEA; Vienna (International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)); Symposium on Nuclear Materials Management; Vienna (Austria); 30 Aug - 3 Sep 1965; STI/PUB--110; IAEA-SM--67; ISSN 0074-1884;
; Refs., figs., tabs.

Record Type
Book
Literature Type
Conference
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INIS VolumeINIS Volume
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