1. Size characteristics of plutonium particles in rocky flats soil
- Author
-
Whicker Fw and McDowell Lm
- Subjects
Colorado ,Soil test ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Mineralogy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Spatial distribution ,Plutonium ,chemistry ,Emulsion ,Particle ,Environmental science ,Soil Pollutants ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Hydraulic diameter ,Nuclear emulsion ,Particle Size - Abstract
A modified version of J. A. Leary's autoradiographic technique, utilizing nuclear emulsion plates, was used to obtain abundance of, and equivalent size distributions for, plutonium particles in Rocky Flats surface soil. A total of 1700 particles were sized, for which mean 239PuO2 equivalent diameters of 0.29, 0.25 and 0.20 μm were found for exposures of soil for varying times to emulsion plates. Uncertainties associated with values necessary to extrapolate to actual diameters were considered. A method to scan for particles greater than 1.50-μm equivalent diameter, utilizing X-ray film, was also used. The largest particle sized with this procedure was 6.86-μm 239PuO2 equivalent diameter, which would not be of sufficient magnitude alone to account for elevated plutonium activity observed previously in several Rocky Flats surface soil samples. Variability in particle concentrations was observed, however, which suggested that a heterogeneity in the spatial distribution of plutonium particles in the soil may partially explain observed variability in sail plutonium concentrations.
- Published
- 1978