Carboneau, M L and Adams, J P. "National Low-Level Waste Management Program Radionuclide Report Series. Volume 10, Nickel-63." , Feb. 1995. https://doi.org/10.2172/31669Carboneau, M L, & Adams, J P (1995). National Low-Level Waste Management Program Radionuclide Report Series. Volume 10, Nickel-63. https://doi.org/10.2172/31669Carboneau, M L, and Adams, J P, "National Low-Level Waste Management Program Radionuclide Report Series. Volume 10, Nickel-63," (1995), https://doi.org/10.2172/31669@techreport{osti_31669, author = {Carboneau, M L and Adams, J P}, title = {National Low-Level Waste Management Program Radionuclide Report Series. Volume 10, Nickel-63}, institution = {Lockheed Idaho Technologies Co., Idaho Falls, ID (United States)}, annote = {This report outlines the basic radiological, chemical, and physical characteristics of nickel-63 ({sup 63}Ni) and examines how these characteristics affect the behavior of {sup 63}Ni in various environmental media, such as soils, groundwater, plants, animals, the atmosphere, and the human body. Discussions also include methods of {sup 63}Ni production, waste types, and waste forms that contain {sup 63}Ni. The primary source of {sup 63}Ni in the environment has been low-level radioactive waste material generated as a result of neutron activation of stable {sup 62}Ni that is present in the structural components of nuclear reactor vessels. {sup 63}Ni enters the environment from the dismantling activities associated with nuclear reactor decommissioning. However, small amounts of {sup 63}Ni have been detected in the environment following the testing of thermonuclear weapons in the South Pacific. Concentrations as high as 2.7 Bq{sup a} per gram of sample (or equivalently 0.0022 parts per billion) were observed on Bikini Atoll (May 1954). {sup 63}Ni was not created as a fission product species (e.g., from {sup 235}U or {sup 239}Pu fissions), but instead was produced as a result of neutron capture in {sup 63}Ni, a common nickel isotope present in the stainless steel components of nuclear weapons (e.g., stainless-304 contains {approximately}9% total Ni or {approximately}0.3% {sup 63}Ni).}, doi = {10.2172/31669}, url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/31669}, place = {United States}, year = {1995}, month = {02}}You mustSign In orCreate an Account in order to save documents to your library.