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inside of nuclear facility

This page contains emergency preparedness information for those living or visiting within approximately 10 miles of Dominion Energy’s nuclear power plants (or referred to as emergency planning zones or EPZs). The following information is provided for educational purposes on how to prepare in the unlikely event of an emergency at one of our nuclear power stations.

This information is updated on a regular basis. Select the nuclear power station closest to you for emergency preparedness information specific to that station:     

Nuclear Facilities

About Radiation

Radiation is energy emitted in tiny waves or particles. It naturally occurs in the environment; it is not new or mysterious. We receive radiation from the sun, minerals in the earth, food we eat, and building materials. We even give off radiation.

You can’t see, taste, or hear radiation. However, you can measure radiation – in units called rem and millirem. The rem is a unit of measure that considers the effect that different types of radiation have on the body.

The table below shows the average mrem an individual in the United States receives from naturally occurring and man-made radioactive material. 

Natural Background

 

Radon and Radon Daughters

228.0 mrem

Cosmic Rays

33.0 mrem

Terrestrial Radiation

21.0 mrem

Internal Radiation

29.0 mrem

Per Year Total:

311.0 mrem

 

Man-Made

 

Diagnostic X-Rays

33.0 mrem

Other Medical

267.0 mrem

Consumer Products

13.0 mrem

Occupational

0.5 mrem

Nuclear Power

0.1 mrem

Miscellaneous

0.3 mrem

Per Year Total:

314.0 mrem

 

Total Natural and Man-Made sources Per Year Total: 625.0 mrem

Radiation can produce charged particles in material it strikes. Charged particles are known as ions. The most common types of ionizing radiation are alpha, beta, and gamma:

  • Alpha radiation is the least penetrating type. It can be stopped with a shield equivalent to a sheet of paper.
  • Beta radiation consists of electrons that can be stopped by the equivalent of thin cardboard.
  • Gamma radiation consists of electro-magnetic waves that can be stopped by heavy shielding such as concrete or lead. 

Exposure to large amounts of radiation can be harmful or even fatal; however, radiation emitted during normal nuclear power plant operations is very small, as indicated in the tables above.

Radiation risk depends on:

  • The kind of rays and particles that strike an individual.
  • The length of time you are exposed.
  • The parts of your body exposed.
  • The amount of radioactive material that enters an individual's body through eating or breathing.
  • Age – radiation does more harm to young children because the cells in their bodies are growing much faster than the cells of older children and adults.

Learn more about radiation and the various sources of radiation.

Nuclear plants produce electricity by boiling water to create steam, which turns a turbine to produce electricity. The difference is nuclear power plants create heat needed to boil water through nuclear fission. Nuclear fission is the physical process of splitting an atom to produce carbon-free electricity. Within the nuclear reactor, uranium, the most common nuclear fuel, is contained in small, ceramic pellets and placed in long, vertical tubes (called fuel rods). Fuel rods are then bundled together in fuel assemblies.

The animated graphic below shows how a pressurized water reactor works. The core inside in the Reactor Vessel creates heat (where nuclear fission takes place). The Pressurizer keeps water under high pressure so that it heats but does not boil. The Steam Generator converts water coming from the reactor core into steam. Water from the reactor and the water in the steam generator that is turned into steam never mix. This allows most radioactivity to stay in the reactor area. Steam is then pumped into a Turbine, pushing giant blades to turn the electrical Generator. Electricity is produced and transmitted to your home. After turning the turbines, unused steam is cooled and condensed by cooling water from a water source through the Condenser. The condensed steam – now water – is pumped back into the Steam Generator to be reheated and the process is repeated.

Nuclear power illustration
Source: Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)

 

Nuclear power stations are designed and built to prevent large amounts of radioactivity from reaching the environment, both during normal operation and in the event of an accident. These intensive efforts by the industry have worked well in the more than 40 years of nuclear power production in this country, without a single radiation-related death or serious injury involving a member of the public having ever been recorded. The likelihood of such an occurrence in the future is extremely small.
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