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Oil is not generally radioactive unless it was originally located near radioactive material when it was extracted. More often, it only becomes radioactive when exposed to or stored near radioactive materials post processing.
Tri Blade
The radioactive materials produced in a nuclear reactor are radioactive because of instability in the nucleus of the atoms of the radioactive materials. Chemistry only affects the way elements behave because of the electron structure. Chemistry is electonic and the radioactive products have problems in their nuclei. Chemistry doesn't affect the nucleus of the atom, so chemical methods cannot be used to deal with radioactive materials, per se.
The correct answer is LEAD. You can find the same question/answer if you type in "The element used for storing and transporting radioactive materials is?" in the search bar.
carbon-14
Yes, it is possible but also other materials were used.
"The distinctive symbol used to identify radioactive materials is the
Radioactive materials decay at predictable rates
Oil is not generally radioactive unless it was originally located near radioactive material when it was extracted. More often, it only becomes radioactive when exposed to or stored near radioactive materials post processing.
Radioactive substances are the things that put off radiation. These could be radioactive waste, or even radioactive materials not yet used.
LEAD
lead
Tri Blade
In that case, the radioactive materials will pollute the atmosphere.
Francium has an extremely short half life of about 20 minutes so no it is not. Radioactive lasers do not use radioactive materials anyway.
The DOT (Department of Transportation) class for radioactive materials is Hazardous. The specific Hazard number will be determined by the exact name of the radioactive materials. Special permits and placarding are needed for vehicles carrying hazardous materials. The DOT class is categorized into 9 classes according to hazardous materials transportation. Class 7 is the general DOT class for radioactive materials.
Maybe, b'cos of the small amounts of radioactive materials used in them( NOT SO SURE). that may affect us.