Application Brief

Scrap Metal & Recycling

Detect orphan and sealed sources and contaminated loads at foundries and recycling yards, before a hidden source reaches the melt and turns into a costly, hazardous event.

Berkeley Nucleonics Isotope Identification & Radiation Detection
Berkeley Nucleonics SAMmobile 150 vehicle-mounted radiation detection system

The Mission

A sealed radioactive source from a decommissioned gauge or medical device gets scrapped by mistake and enters the recycling stream. If it reaches a furnace, it contaminates the melt, the slag, the baghouse dust, and the facility itself. Cleanup runs into the millions, the furnace goes offline, and workers may be exposed. The mission at a scrap yard or foundry is to catch that source at the gate, never at the melt.

Berkeley Nucleonics builds the detection layers that make gate-to-melt screening practical: fixed monitoring at the entrance, mobile screening across the yard, and handheld identification to run down whatever the monitors find.

The Challenge

Scrap arrives by the truckload and the railcar, in dense, irregular piles of metal. That is close to a worst case for radiation detection. A small sealed source buried in a load of steel is partially self-shielded, and the source could be anywhere in the pile. Screening has to be sensitive enough to catch a weak signal through metal, and it has to happen at the pace of the yard, because stopping every truck for a manual search is not workable.

Once a monitor alarms, the next question is whether the alarm is a real sealed source or harmless NORM. Scrap routinely carries NORM in the form of mineral scale, pipe deposits, and certain alloys. An operation that treats every NORM alarm as a source wastes time and money; one that waves them through risks letting a real source past. Telling them apart requires isotope identification, not just a count rate. Through it all, the priority is protecting the melt and the workers, because the cost of a contaminated heat dwarfs the cost of the detection equipment.

Recommended Berkeley Nucleonics Solutions

Effective scrap screening layers fixed monitoring, mobile coverage, and handheld identification.

Gate monitoring

The Model 960 radiation monitoring system is the fixed sentinel at the gate. Built around large NaI or plastic detectors, it provides continuous gamma monitoring suited to screening trucks and railcars as they enter, so every inbound load is checked without manual intervention. It is the first line that turns gate screening into a routine, automatic step.

Mobile and yard screening

The SAMmobile 150 (RD-150) is a vehicle-mounted radiation detection system that extends screening across the yard and into stockpiles that a fixed gate monitor cannot reach. Its large NaI detectors and GPS mapping let a vehicle survey piles, lanes, and storage areas and log exactly where any elevated reading was found, which speeds the search for a source within a large load.

Secondary identification

When a monitor alarms, a handheld identifier resolves it. The SAM 940+ detects gamma and neutron radiation and identifies across the ANSI, SNM, IND, MED, NORM, and custom categories, so an operator can separate a genuine sealed source from a NORM nuisance alarm and locate it in the load. The offers the same identification in a smartphone-linked handheld for teams that prefer that interface.

Personal protection

Yard and furnace staff working near scrap should carry a personal detector. The Model 951 nukeALERT is a pager-sized gamma alarm that warns a worker the moment they approach an unscreened source, adding a personal safety layer behind the fixed and mobile monitors.

Why It Works

The layered approach works because it catches a source at the earliest possible point and then resolves it efficiently. The Model 960 at the gate screens every inbound load automatically, so nothing enters the yard unchecked. The SAMmobile 150 covers the ground a fixed monitor cannot, surveying stockpiles and lanes and pinning down where an elevated reading sits in a large pile. Together they turn the whole site into a screened space.

Identification is what makes the system economical. Without it, every alarm is a full stop and a manual search. The SAM identifiers separate a real sealed source from NORM scale in seconds, so the yard keeps moving and the operator's attention goes to the alarms that actually threaten the melt. Catching one orphan source before it reaches the furnace pays for the entire detection program many times over, which is why the personal detectors on staff are the final, low-cost backstop.

Verify. Detection sensitivity for shielded or self-attenuated sources, and any regulatory or standards conformance, should be confirmed against the current published Berkeley Nucleonics datasheet for each model before procurement.

Getting Started

Berkeley Nucleonics can help your foundry or recycling operation design a gate-to-melt screening layout, from fixed gate monitors to mobile systems and handheld identifiers. Call 800-234-7858 or email info@berkeleynucleonics.com.

To compare models and detector options, see the Isotope ID & Radiation Detection documentation and selection guide.