Author/Authors :
L. SkipperudU، نويسنده , , D. Oughton، نويسنده , , B. Salbu، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
To assess the long-term consequences when radionuclides are released into the environment, information on the
source term, transport and transformation processes, interaction with soils KD. and biological uptake CF. is
needed. Among the artificial radionuclides released to the environment by nuclear activities, the transuranium
elements are a major concern, due to very long half-lives and their accumulation in bone as well as high radiotoxicity.
Plutonium has been produced in greater quantity than other transuranic elements, however, environmental
assessments are complicated by the complex environmental behaviour. Physico-chemical forms of Pu will determine
the interactions with soils and, thus, the degree to which soils can act as a sink or a potential diffuse source of
contaminants. In the present work, dynamic tracer experiments have been performed where different Pu-species are
added to a ‘Mayak soil]rainwater system’ to obtain information on KD values. After a defined contact time, the
samples where then sequentially extracted and results are used in a dynamic box model to estimate interaction and
fixation rates. The interaction of all Pu-species with soils seems to be rapid and follows a two-step reaction. Up to
contact times of a few weeks, the KD for Pu III,IV. 730"240 lrkg. is approximately one order of magnitude higher
than for Pu V,VI. 90"20 lrkg. and Pu III,IV.-organic 40]60 lrkg.. After 3 months contact time, the KD in only
the two organic-bound Pu-species were significantly lower. This shows that the initial association with the soil is
dependent on the Pu-species in the rainwater. After only 1 h of contact, between 33 and 40% of the plutonium was
strongly bound to the soil components, i.e. only extractable with strong HNO3. The extraction of soil-bound Pu
followed a similar pattern for all the original species, suggesting that the next step of Pu interaction mechanism with
soil was rather independent of the original species. For both the Pu V,VI. and Pu-organic species, the rainwaterdesorption
extract gave consistently higher KD values than that calculated from the rainwater-sorption data; whereas
for Pu III,IV., desorption KD values were more similar to sorption KD values. This supports the suggestion that the observed difference in Pu adsorption to soils reflects Pu-speciation in the water soluble phase, and that actual
soil]Pu interactions are rather independent of the original speciation. Modelling of the extraction data show a
different in association rate for the different Pu species, where the Pu III,IV. has the fastest association rate as
expected.
Keywords :
Speciation , distribution , KD , plutonium , interaction