Contamination & Irradiation (OCR Gateway GCSE Physics)

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Contamination & Irradiation

Contamination

  • Contamination is defined as:

The unwanted presence of materials containing radioactive atoms on other materials

  • A substance is only radioactive if it contains radioactive atoms that emit radiation
  • Contamination occurs when a radioactive isotope gets onto a material where it should not be
    • This is often due to a radiation leak

  • As a result of this, the small amounts of the isotope in the contaminated areas will emit radiation and the material becomes radioactive

The Assassination of Alexander Litvinenko

  • Contamination is almost always a mistake or an accident
    • However, in 2006 a former Russian spy was poisoned by a radioactive isotope

  • His name was Alexander Litvinenko and he was contaminated with the isotope polonium-210
    • He died because of the poisoning

Poison tea, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

It is believed that the polonium-210 that poisoned Alexander Litvinenko was secretly put into a cup of tea he was drinking


Irradiation

  • Irradiation is defined as:

The process of exposing a material to alpha, beta or gamma radiation

  • Irradiating a material does not make that material radioactive
    • However, it can kill living cells

Radiation-Hazard, IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

This sign is the international symbol indicating the presence of a radioactive material

  • Irradiation can be used as a method of sterilisation:
    • Surgical equipment is irradiated before being used in order to kill any micro-organisms on it before surgery
    • Food can be irradiated to kill any micro-organisms within it
    • This makes the food last longer without going mouldy

Comparing Contamination and Irradiation

  • Irradiation is the process of exposing a material to alpha, beta or gamma radiation
  • Contamination is where small amounts of the radioactive isotope leak onto the material
  • The only way a material can become radioactive is if that material becomes contaminated
  • Although irradiation can cause harm, contamination has the potential to cause far more harm, due to the continuous exposure to radiation that it will produce
  • Contamination is particularly dangerous if a radioactive source gets into the human body
    • The internal organs will be irradiated as the source emits radiation as it moves through the body

    Comparison of Irradiation and Contamination Table

    Irradiation & Contamination Comparison Table, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

Protecting against Irradiation and Contamination

  • It is important to reduce the risk of exposure to radiation
  • Radiation can mutate DNA in cells and cause cancer
  • Shielding is used to absorb radiation
    • Lead lined suits are used to reduce irradiation for people working with radioactive materials
    • The lead absorbs most of the radiation that would otherwise hit the person

  • To prevent contamination an airtight suit is used by people working in an area where there may have been a radiation leak
    • This prevents radioactive atoms from getting inside the person

Safety wear, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes

Lead shielding is used when a person is getting an x-ray, as well as for people who work with radiation. Contamination carries much greater risks than irradiation

Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster

  • Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant is in Ukraine
  • In 1986 an incident at the plant caused an explosion
  • A large amount of radioactive material was released from the plant and went into the air
  • Hundreds of thousands of people were evacuated from the surrounding area to protect them from being contaminated
  • An exclusion zone of around 2,600 square kilometres is still in place around the power plant
    • This is because the level of radiation in the area is still very high

Exam Tip

Irradiation and contamination are very commonly confused. Remember that something is radioactive only if it contains radioactive atoms. This can only occur from contamination, not from irradiation!

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Joanna

Author: Joanna

Joanna obtained her undergraduate degree in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University and completed her MSc in Education at Loughborough University. After a decade of teaching and leading the physics department in a high-performing academic school, Joanna now mentors new teachers and is currently studying part-time for her PhD at Leicester University. Her passions are helping students and learning about cool physics, so creating brilliant resources to help with exam preparation is her dream job!