Smoke alarms that use radioactive material incorporated in an ionisation chamber are called ‘ion chamber smoke alarms’. The application of a low evel electric voltage to the ionisation chamber which contains a radioactive source (Americium-241) causes a steady electric current to flow. Smoke or hot air entering the chamber changes the electric current level, triggering an alarm.
Radiation from natural sources is always present in the environment. It is in the food we eat, the air we breathe and the buildings we live in. This type of exposure is known as background radiation. Besides the radioactive materials that occur naturally in our environment, there are human-made radioactive materials. Americium-241 is one such material. The dose rate from a domestic smoke alarm at a distance of one metre is less than one thousandth of that from background radiation,which in Australia is on average 2 millisievert per year. At greater distances, the dose rate is much lower. The dose rate to the hands when holding a smoke alarm is higher but is still lessthan one tenth that from background radiation. As thehands are very much less sensitive to radiation than internal organs and the time of exposure is likely to be only a few minutes per year, no significant radiation exposure would occur.
The radioactive source in a smoke alarm is extremely insoluble and, if swallowed, would not be absorbed into the body but would pass through the digestive system. In a house fire, temperatures are unlikely to exceed 1200° C. While such a fire temperature might be sufficient to melt the source it would not be enough to vaporise it and create an inhalation hazard.Individual (or small numbers of) smoke alarms can be safely disposed of in domestic rubbish. The amount of radioactive material in each smoke alarm is extremely small. From environmental and public health perspectives, the disposal of individual smoke alarms with domestic rubbish does not represent any risk. When more than ten smoke alarms (or more particularly, the Americium-241 sources) are collected together for bulk disposal, they must be treated as radioactive waste, and the requirements of the National Health and Medical Research Council’s Code of Practice for the Near-Surface Disposal of Radioactive Waste in Australia (1992) must be met. Contact your state or territory radiation control authority for advice.
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