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Potential Source Apportionment and Meteorological Conditions Involved in Airborne 131I Detections in January/February 2017 in Europe

Authors :
J. Kövendiné Kónyi
Renata Kierepko
J. Bieringer
I. Sykora
Petr Rulík
R. Rusconi
Kurt Ungar
Laurent Pourcelot
W. Ringer
Konstantinos Eleftheriadis
H. Wershofen
C. Gasco Leonarte
A. de Vismes-Ott
Zsolt Homoki
J. Tschiersch
Benjamin Zorko
M. Hýža
Georg Steinhauser
Olivier Masson
Tero Karhunen
Dragana Todorović
Pavel P. Povinec
B. Møller
Helmut W Fischer
E. Dalaka
G. Sáfrány
Jerzy W. Mietelski
K. Isajenko
Thomas Steinkopff
Helena Malá
Olivier Saunier
A. Dalheimer
Jelena Krneta Nikolić
Christian Katzlberger
T.W. Bowyer
M. Rajacic
M. Forte
K. Gorzkiewicz
Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN)
Source :
Environ. Sci. Technol. 52, 8488-8500 (2018), Environmental Science and Technology, Environmental Science and Technology, American Chemical Society, 2018, 52 (15), pp.8488-8500. ⟨10.1021/acs.est.8b01810⟩
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2018.

Abstract

International audience; Traces of particulate radioactive iodine (131I) were detected in the European atmosphere in January/February 2017. Concentrations of this nuclear fission product were very low, ranging 0.1 to 10 μBq m-3 except at one location in western Russia where they reached up to several mBq m-3. Detections have been reported continuously over an 8-week period by about 30 monitoring stations. We examine possible emission source apportionments and rank them considering their expected contribution in terms of orders of magnitude from typical routine releases: radiopharmaceutical production units > sewage sludge incinerators > nuclear power plants > spontaneous fission of uranium in soil. Inverse modeling simulations indicate that the widespread detections of 131I resulted from the combination of multiple source releases. Among them, those from radiopharmaceutical production units remain the most likely. One of them is located in Western Russia and its estimated source term complies with authorized limits. Other existing sources related to 131I use (medical purposes or sewage sludge incineration) can explain detections on a rather local scale. As an enhancing factor, the prevailing wintertime meteorological situations marked by strong temperature inversions led to poor dispersion conditions that resulted in higher concentrations exceeding usual detection limits in use within the informal Ring of Five (Ro5) monitoring network. © 2018 American Chemical Society.

Details

ISSN :
15205851 and 0013936X
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Science & Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....27576aa8e448d074f9d8af9ecbded514
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.8b01810