September 21, 2022
Conference Paper

Transitioning from Cobalt-60 to X-Ray or E-Beam for Medical Sterilization: Filling Data and Education Gaps

Abstract

The Office of Radiological Security (ORS) within the U.S. DOE’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) is charged to “work with government, law enforcement, and businesses across the globe to protect radioactive sources used for medical, research, and commercial purposes; remove and dispose of disused radioactive sources; and reduce the global reliance on high activity radioactive sources through the promotion of viable non-radioisotopic alternative technologies.” In this effort, the NNSA/ORS, along with the Office of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation R&D, has been working with government and private entities that utilize gamma-ray irradiators in areas that include blood irradiation, radiotherapy, biology research, well logging, and radiation processing to consider alternative technologies that do not depend upon radioactive materials. In the medical device industry, nearly 50% of products are sterilized with ethylene oxide, 40.5% with cobalt-60 gamma-rays, 4.5% with electron-beam (e-beam), and

Published: September 21, 2022

Citation

Fifield L.S., M. Pharr, D. Staack, M.K. Murphy, M. Huang, and M.K. Hasan. 2019. Transitioning from Cobalt-60 to X-Ray or E-Beam for Medical Sterilization: Filling Data and Education Gaps. In Transactions of the American Nuclear Society, 121, 1089-1092. La Grange Park, Illinois:American Nuclear Society. PNNL-SA-176824.