QUARTERLY REPORT
ENVIRONMENTAL AND RADIOLOGICAL SAFETY STUDIES

Interaction of 78PuO2 Heat Sources

with Terrestrial and Aquatic Environments

July 1 to September 30, 1975
Compiled by
Glenn R. Waterbury

ABSTRACT

The containers for “®PuOQ, heat sources in radioisotope

thermoelectric generators are designed with large safety factors to
ensure that they will withstand reentry from orbit and impact with
the earth and safely contain the nuclear fuel until it is recovered.
Existing designs have proved more than adequately safe, but the
Office of the Assistant Director, Safety and Reliability Programs,
of the ERDA Division of Space Nuclear Systems continually seeks
more information about the heat sources to improve their safety.

The work discussed here includes studies of the effects on the heat

source of terrestrial and aquatic environments to obtain data for
design of even safer systems. The data obtained in several ongoing
experiments are presented; these data tables will be updated
quarterly. Discussions of details of the experimental testing are
minimized, and they will be largely repetitive in succeeding reports
to emphasize the main purpose, compilation of all usable data
generated in each experiment. This compilation includes data from
environmental chamber experiments that simulate terrestrial con-

ditions, experiments to measure PuQO, dissolution rates, soil
column experiments to measure sorption of plutonium bysoils, and
several aquatic experiments.

.

No reference to results cited in this report should be published

without the explicit permission of the person in chargeof this work.

I. INTRODUCTION

measurements contained radioisotope heat sources.
Becausethe half-life of 2°8Puis relatively short (87.5

provide heat for electric

yr), the alpha-particle specific activity is high

for several years. Therefore, they are used in many
space missions to provide electric power for instruments and data transmission. In five of the

enriched in 2°8Pu has been used to supply the heat

Radioisotope sources

power generators that can supply constant voltage

Apollo manned landings on the moon, the scientific
instrument packages deployed for postmission

enough (equivalent to 0.56 W/g of 2*8Pu) to be used
as a heat source in electrical power generation. In
nearly all space applications to date, plutonium 80°
for the generators. The heat source container is
designed with a great safety factor to withstand both

Select target paragraph3