(2) A licensee using tracer material shall have available
at each additional authorized use/storage location and temporary job
site additional calibrated and operable radiation survey instruments
sensitive enough to detect the radioactive surface contamination limits
specified in §289.202(eee) of this title.
(3) Each radiation survey instrument capable of detecting
beta and gamma radiation shall be calibrated:
(A) by a person specifically licensed or registered
by the agency, another agreement state or the United States Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC) to perform such service;
(B) at intervals not to exceed six months and after
each survey instrument repair;
(C) for the types of radiation used and at energies
appropriate for use; and
(D) at an accuracy within ±20% of the true radiation
level at each calibration point.
(4) The licensee or registrant shall maintain calibration
records in accordance with subsection (ee)(5) of this section.
(j) Leak testing of sealed sources.
(1) Testing and record keeping. Sealed sources shall
be tested for leakage and contamination in accordance with this section
and §289.201(g) of this title. The licensee shall maintain records
of leak tests in accordance with subsection (ee)(5) of this section.
(2) Each energy compensation source that is not exempt
from testing in accordance with §289.201(g)(2) of this title
shall be tested at intervals not to exceed three years. In the absence
of a certificate from a transferor that a test has been made within
the three years before the transfer, the energy compensation source
may not be used until tested in accordance with §289.201(g) of
this title.
(3) If a sealed source is found to be leaking in accordance
with §289.201(g) of this title, the licensee shall check the
equipment associated with the leaking source for radioactive contamination
and, if contaminated, have it decontaminated or disposed of by persons
specifically authorized by the agency, the NRC, or an agreement state,
to perform such services.
(k) Quarterly inventory. Each licensee or registrant
shall conduct a physical inventory to account for all sources of radiation
received or possessed at intervals not to exceed three months. The
licensee or registrant shall make and maintain records of inventories
in accordance with subsection (ee)(5) of this section and shall include
the following:
(1) the quantities and kinds of sources of radiation;
(2) the location where sources of radiation are assigned;
(3) a unique identification of each source of radiation;
(4) the date of the inventory; and
(5) the name of the individual conducting the inventory.
(l) Utilization records. Utilization records shall
be maintained by each licensee or registrant in accordance with subsection
(ee)(5) of this section and shall include the following information
for each source of radiation:
(1) identification of each source of radiation to include:
(A) the make and model number and/or serial number
(or if absent, a description) of each sealed source used; or
(B) the radionuclide and activity of tracer materials
and radioactive markers used at a particular well site and the disposition
of any unused tracer materials.
(2) the identity of the logging supervisor or individual
who is responsible for receiving sources of radiation, to whom assigned;
and
(3) the locations where used and dates of use.
(m) Design and performance criteria for sealed sources
used in well logging operations.
(1) Each sealed source used in well logging applications
shall meet the following minimum criteria.
(A) The sealed source is of doubly encapsulated construction.
(B) The sealed source contains radioactive material
with a chemical/physical form as insoluble and nondispersible as practicable.
(C) The sealed source meets one of the following requirements:
(i) for a sealed source manufactured on or before July
14, 1989, the requirements from the United States of America Standards
Institute (USASI) N5.10-1968, "Classification of Sealed Radioactive
Sources," or the requirements in clause (ii) or (iii) of this subparagraph;
(ii) for a sealed source manufactured after July 14,
1989, the oil-well logging requirements from the American National
Standards Institute/Health Physics Society (ANSI/HPS) N43.6-1997,
"Sealed Radioactive Sources-Classification;" or
(iii) for a sealed source manufactured after July 14,
1989, the sealed source's prototype has been tested and found to maintain
its integrity after each of the following tests:
(I) Temperature. The test source shall be held at -40
degrees Celsius for 20 minutes, 600 degrees Celsius for one hour,
and then be subjected to a thermal shock test with a temperature drop
from 600 degrees Celsius to 20 degrees Celsius within 15 seconds.
(II) Impact. A 5 kilogram (kg) steel hammer, 2.5 centimeters
(cm) in diameter, shall be dropped from a height of 1 meter (m) onto
the test source.
(III) Vibration. The test source shall be subjected
to a vibration from 25 Hertz (Hz) to 500 Hz with a peak amplitude
of five times the acceleration of gravity for 30 minutes.
(IV) Puncture. A 1 gram (gm) hammer and pin, 0.3 cm
pin diameter, shall be dropped from a height of 1 m onto the test
source.
(V) Pressure. The test source shall be subjected to
an external pressure of 24,600 pounds per square inch absolute (1.695
x 107 pascals) without leakage.
(2) The requirements in paragraph (1) of this subsection
do not apply to sealed sources that contain radioactive material in
gaseous form.
(3) The requirements in this subsection do not apply
to energy compensation sources.
(n) Labeling.
(1) Each source, source holder, or logging tool containing
radioactive material in other than an exempt quantity, shall bear
a durable, legible, and clearly visible marking or label that has,
as a minimum, the standard radiation caution symbol with no color
requirement, and the wording DANGER (or CAUTION), RADIOACTIVE--DO
NOT HANDLE, NOTIFY CIVIL AUTHORITIES (OR NAME OF COMPANY).
(2) The labeling specified in paragraph (1) of this
subsection shall be on the smallest component, source, source holder,
or logging tool that is transported as a separate piece of equipment.
(3) Each transport container shall have permanently
attached to it a durable, legible, and clearly visible label that
has, as a minimum, the standard radiation caution symbol and the wording
DANGER (or CAUTION), RADIOACTIVE, NOTIFY CIVIL AUTHORITIES (OR NAME
OF COMPANY).
(4) Each transport container shall have attached to
it a durable, legible, and clearly visible label(s) that has, as a
minimum, the licensee's name, address, and telephone number, the radionuclide,
its activity, and assay date.
(o) Inspection and maintenance.
(1) Each licensee or registrant shall conduct, at intervals
not to exceed six months, a program of visual inspection and maintenance
of source holders (or sealed source, if there is no source holder),
logging tools, source handling tools, storage containers, transport
containers, and injection tools to assure proper labeling and physical
condition. The inspection program may be performed concurrently with
routine leak testing of sealed sources. Records of inspection and
maintenance shall be made and maintained by the licensee or registrant
in accordance with subsection (ee)(5) of this section.
(2) If any inspection conducted in accordance with
paragraph (1) of this subsection reveals damage to labeling or components
critical to radiation safety, the device shall be removed from service
at the time the damage is discovered and until repairs have been made.
(3) Any operation, such as drilling, cutting, or chiseling
on a source holder containing a sealed source, shall be performed
on the source holder only by persons specifically licensed to do so
by the agency, another agreement state, or the NRC. The provisions
of this paragraph do not apply to logging tool recovery (fishing)
operations conducted in accordance with the provisions of subsection
(dd)(4) of this section.
(4) The repair, opening, or modification of any sealed
source shall be performed only by persons specifically licensed to
do so by the agency, another agreement or licensing state, or the
NRC.
(p) Training requirements.
(1) No licensee or registrant shall permit any individual
to act as a logging supervisor until such individual has met the following
requirements:
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