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Radium sources yield cancer-fighting Ac-225 in IAEA program
The International Atomic Energy Agency has reported that, to date, 14 countries have made 14 transfers of disused radium to be recycled for use in advanced cancer treatments under the agency’s Global Radium-226 Management Initiative. Through this initiative, which was launched in 2021, legacy radium-226 from decades-old medical and industrial sources is used to produce actinium-225 radiopharmaceuticals, which have shown effectiveness in the treatment of patients with breast and prostate cancer and certain other cancers.
S.D. Harkness, J. A. Tesk, Che-Yu Li
Nuclear Technology | Volume 9 | Number 1 | July 1970 | Pages 24-30
Fuel Cladding Model | Symposium on Theoretical Models for Predicting In-Reactor Performance of Fuel and Cladding Material | doi.org/10.13182/NT70-A28724
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
A model has been developed for the evolution of voids and dislocation loops during fast neutron irradiation of austenitic stainless steel. The model is based on a thermodynamic approach that calculates void nucleation and growth rates in terms of the supersaturation of vacancies and interstitials. It is recognized that the steady-state point-defect concentrations decrease with fluence as the result of the creation of additional sinks (voids and loops). The ability to monitor both the microstructural development and the steady-state concentrations of defects allows discussion of the in-pile mechanical properties. The yield strength of austenitic stainless steel is expected to increase rapidly during irradiation at 400°C due to the effectiveness of voids and dislocation loops as obstacles to dislocation motion. Irradiation at 600°C is predicted to result in a slowly increasing yield strength. In-reactor creep behavior is discussed in terms of a climb-controlled model for a dispersion strengthened system. Radiation-enhanced climb is expected to predominate at lower temperatures and stresses over the thermal climb component. Discussion of the possible effects of neutron flux and fluence on the in-pile steady-state creep rate is also included.