Radioactive Waste (Oxford AQA IGCSE Physics)

Revision Note

Caroline Carroll

Expertise

Physics Subject Lead

Radioactive Waste

  • The products formed during nuclear reactions may also be radioactive

  • Some of these products may have a long half-life and so will remain radioactive for long periods of time

  • The biggest problem associated with using nuclear power for generating electricity is the waste that it produces

    • This is an important factor which influences the use of nuclear power

  • The waste comprises of the unusable fission products from the fission of uranium-235, plutonium-239, or from spent fuel rods

    • This is because each fission of a uranium-235 or plutonium-239 nucleus results in two smaller nuclei being produced

  • Unusable fission products are by far the most dangerous type of waste as they will remain radioactive for thousands of years due to their long half-life

    • These smaller (daughter) nuclei are both highly radioactive – more radioactive, in fact than the original fuel

  • As well as being highly radioactive, the spent fuel roads are extremely hot and must be handled and stored much more carefully than the other types of waste

  • Whilst the amount of waste produced (relative to the amount of energy generated) is fairly small, the waste is extremely dangerous

    • Therefore, the waste must be stored underground till it is no longer harmful

Storing nuclear waste underground

Radioactive waste being buried underground for IGCSE & GCSE Physics revision notes
Nuclear waste is stored underground whilst the fission products are still radioactive

Chernobyl nuclear disaster

  • Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant is in Ukraine

  • In 1986 an incident at the plant caused an explosion

  • The explosion occurred during a safety test in which the control rods were removed

  • 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

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Caroline Carroll

Author: Caroline Carroll

Caroline graduated from the University of Nottingham with a degree in Chemistry and Molecular Physics. She spent several years working as an Industrial Chemist in the automotive industry before retraining to teach. Caroline has over 12 years of experience teaching GCSE and A-level chemistry and physics. She is passionate about creating high-quality resources to help students achieve their full potential.