TY - JOUR
T1 - Parametric Analysis of Radiological Impact from Hypothetical Accident Scenario at the Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant
AU - Akou, Osamong Gideon
AU - Wang, Xuan
AU - Liu, Shuhuan
AU - Liu, Xinwei
AU - Su, Guanghui
AU - Zhang, Ailing
AU - Zhang, Junfang
AU - Lv, Minghua
AU - Huang, Lei
AU - Yang, Shanchao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 American Nuclear Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Growing demand for energy has positioned nuclear power as a crucial alternative, yet radionuclide emissions present significant environmental and health risks, necessitating precise radiological assessments. Previous studies have emphasized stability class effects, but have often neglected key parametric factors, such as stack height, stack diameter, source geometry, and effluent temperature. This study employs the HotSpot code to simulate the total effective dose (TED), target organ committed dose equivalent (TOCDE), and ground deposition under a hypothetical loss-of-coolant accident at the Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant. Elevated area sources provide the highest mitigation efficacy near the release point, increasing the mitigation ratio from 0.003 at 0.1 km to 0.114 at 10 km, as the effectiveness declines with distance. Point sources yielded the highest TED, with the thyroid receiving 25 Sv unmitigated and 4.5 Sv mitigated of 131I within 0.1 to 0.8 km. TED strongly inversely correlates with stack height, peaking at 0.32 Sv at 30 m for a 10-m stack, while a 100-m stack significantly reduces exposure (3.14 × 10–4 Sv at 10 km). Increasing the stack diameter from 1 to 5.5 m decreased TED from 1.23 × 10–1 Sv to 9.45 × 10–2 Sv over 10 km. Higher effluent temperatures enhance dispersion, reducing TED and TIAC. Cesium-134 dominates TED, while noble gases exhibit minimal deposition. A TOCDE analysis highlighted 134Cs as the primary skin dose contributor (12 Sv) and 131I as the thyroid dose contributor. These findings provide critical insights for optimizing emission controls, mitigation strategies, and nuclear emergency planning.
AB - Growing demand for energy has positioned nuclear power as a crucial alternative, yet radionuclide emissions present significant environmental and health risks, necessitating precise radiological assessments. Previous studies have emphasized stability class effects, but have often neglected key parametric factors, such as stack height, stack diameter, source geometry, and effluent temperature. This study employs the HotSpot code to simulate the total effective dose (TED), target organ committed dose equivalent (TOCDE), and ground deposition under a hypothetical loss-of-coolant accident at the Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant. Elevated area sources provide the highest mitigation efficacy near the release point, increasing the mitigation ratio from 0.003 at 0.1 km to 0.114 at 10 km, as the effectiveness declines with distance. Point sources yielded the highest TED, with the thyroid receiving 25 Sv unmitigated and 4.5 Sv mitigated of 131I within 0.1 to 0.8 km. TED strongly inversely correlates with stack height, peaking at 0.32 Sv at 30 m for a 10-m stack, while a 100-m stack significantly reduces exposure (3.14 × 10–4 Sv at 10 km). Increasing the stack diameter from 1 to 5.5 m decreased TED from 1.23 × 10–1 Sv to 9.45 × 10–2 Sv over 10 km. Higher effluent temperatures enhance dispersion, reducing TED and TIAC. Cesium-134 dominates TED, while noble gases exhibit minimal deposition. A TOCDE analysis highlighted 134Cs as the primary skin dose contributor (12 Sv) and 131I as the thyroid dose contributor. These findings provide critical insights for optimizing emission controls, mitigation strategies, and nuclear emergency planning.
KW - HotSpot
KW - Total effective dose (TED)
KW - source geometry
KW - stability class
KW - stack parameter
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105007001021
U2 - 10.1080/00295450.2025.2476344
DO - 10.1080/00295450.2025.2476344
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105007001021
SN - 0029-5450
JO - Nuclear Technology
JF - Nuclear Technology
ER -