Publication | Open Access
Industrial applications of electron accelerators
46
Citations
32
References
2006
Year
EngineeringIndustrial EngineeringIndustrial AcceleratorsEducationElectron AcceleratorsAccelerator PhysicCircular AcceleratorsAccelerator PhysicsChemical EngineeringInstrumentationRadiation OncologyRadiation ChemistryAccelerator TechnologyMaterials ScienceElectrical EngineeringIonizing RadiationRadiation ApplicationRadiation EffectsAccelerator DesignParticle AcceleratorsHigh-power Electron BeamsParticle Accelerator
Industrial electron accelerators, first used in the 1950s, enable radiation processing that modifies materials, sterilizes medical devices, and preserves food, with modern high‑energy, high‑power beams expanding applications and prompting interest in X‑ray alternatives to radioactive sources. This paper investigates the industrial applications of electron accelerators for modifying the physical, chemical or biological properties of materials and commercial products by treatment with ionizing radiation.
This paper addresses the industrial applications of electron accelerators for modifying the physical, chemical or biological properties of materials and commercial products by treatment with ionizing radiation. Many beneficial effects can be obtained with these methods, which are known as radiation processing. The earliest practical applications occurred during the 1950s, and the business of radiation processing has been expanding since that time. The most prevalent applications are the modification of many different plastic and rubber products and the sterilization of single-use medical devices. Emerging applications are the pasteurization and preservation of foods and the treatment of toxic industrial wastes. Industrial accelerators can now provide electron energies greater than 10 MeV and average beam powers as high as 700 kW. The availability of high-energy, high-power electron beams is stimulating interest in the use of X-rays (bremsstrahlung) as an alternative to gamma rays from radioactive nuclides.
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