1. Solution Target Radioisotope Generator Technical Review May 27th 2009 Dr. John Gahl, University of Missouri Michael Flagg, University of Missouri
2. Welcome Thank you to our partners at Advanced Medical Isotope Corporation (AMIC). Dr. John Gahl is the interim Chair of Chemical Engineering at MU, Program Manager for Materials Science at MURR, serves as core faculty for Nuclear Engineering and is co-inventor of the IP discussed today. Michael Flagg is a nuclear engineer, project manager at MURR and co-inventor of the radioisotope generator patent.
4. Mo-99 Production Mo-99 is the single most important imaging radioisotope used today Supply is insecure Over 10,000 “6 day Curies” used in the U.S. each week No producer of Mo-99 in the United States “Fission Product Mo-99” is the most efficient way of obtaining high specific activity Mo-99 Bulk of current Supply is made from HEU Over 90% of fission product Mo-99 is made at facilities that are at least 40 years old
6. The Core Concepts When a photon with an energy of at least 2.224 MeV strikes a deuteron, a “photoneutron” is ejected from the deuteron’s nucleus. Photons can be generated by accelerating electrons into a High-Z target. The number of photons generated by the electron accelerator increases linearly with the strength of the accelerator. Uranium Salts are soluble in water. Uranyl Nitrate and Uranyl Sulfate have been used in Aqueous Homogenous Reactor Designs since the 1940’s. Whenever U-235 fissions, Mo-99 makes up 6% of the fission products.
7. The Intellectual Property The University of Missouri (MU) holds the rights to two pieces of IP relevant to the core concepts: IP #1: A photoneutron generator made up of a photon source driven by an electron beam accelerator targeted on a tank of D2O. Patent filed. IP #2: A radioisotope generator composed of the above IP with fissile material salts as a target material dispersed in the D2O. Patent filed. AMIC holds an option on both pieces of IP
8. System Overview Solution Target Radioisotope Generator Subcritical loading of Uranium Salts in Heavy Water (D2O) Commercial Electron Beam Accelerator and standard High-Z electron target to generate photons Photoneutrons are generated, causing fission in the Uranium Salts System is boosted by fission neutrons and reflectors Extraction via columns or other separation techniques
11. Irradiation Vessel Molybdenum Extraction Station Treatment and Sampling Station Other Isotope(s) Extraction Station(s) Simple, Direct Processing Mo-99 extracted using special polymer sorbent material or alumina columns No proliferation risk as the extraction stations can be tailored to pull only specific isotopes
12. Production of Mo-99 All equipment is either simple to fabricate or off-the-shelf – no new science Tank, pumps, piping, fission product gas handling, shielding, etc. Strength of Electron Beam Accelerator determines number of photons U-235 LEU is assumed Loading of U-235 drives production of Mo-99 Optimized reflectors will significantly boost production
13. Mo-99 Production Estimates 10MeV 1.0mA electrons 20kg Uranium D2O fills chamber LEU at 19% enrichment homogeneously mixed in D2O 150hour irradiation (6.25days) 100 cm x 100 cm tank Reflector Material Varies
15. Extraction Mo-99 has been extracted from uranyl sulfate solution in Russia using sorbent columns (Ball, Pavshook, et al, 1998) Various methods exist to remove Mo-99 and concentrate it to meet European Pharmacopeia standards (no official US Pharmacopeia standards for Mo-99 as bulk API)
17. Prototype 1 Used existing accelerator infrastructure at Idaho State University Tested and collected data on configurations of heavy water and reflectors – no fissile target material Proved the principle of significant photoneutron production in heavy water Established that computer codes used to predict neutron flux (MCNPX) were accurate
18. Prototype 2 Production facility to test system with fissile salts present and produce relevant amounts of Mo-99 for sale Would include series of cold runs and benchtop chemistry to confirm removal of alpha-emitting impurities Siting critical to rapid construction and testing of Prototype 2
19. Rapid Path to Market Subcritical system NOT a reactor Less onerous regulatory regime Waste stream far less than hard target fission Mo-99 production $1 million/year for every increment of 100 6-day Curies produced and sold at $200/Ci