Back to Search Start Over

Radionuclide concentration and radon exhalation in new mix design of bricks produced reusing NORM by-products: The influence of mineralogy and texture

Authors :
Claudio Mazzoli
Giorgia Cinelli
Domiziano Mostacci
Laura Tositti
Chiara Coletti
Giuseppe Cultrone
Raffaele Sassi
Erika Brattich
Lara Maritan
Coletti, Chiara
Brattich, Erika
Cinelli, Giorgia
Cultrone, Giuseppe
Maritan, Lara
Mazzoli, Claudio
Mostacci, Domiziano
Tositti, Laura
Sassi, Raffaele
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier Ltd, 2020.

Abstract

Many industrial by-products contain Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORM) that normally represent a cost in terms of monitoring, risk management and storage. When included in new mix designs of bricks, these materials may become a valuable sustainable resource. Before marketing, companies involved in development and commercialization of these new building materials ensure safety related to radiation, usually by assessing radon-related risk. According to the Council Directive 2013/59/Euratom, both raw materials and final products used in building constructions need to be tested for activity concentration. The present work explores the radionuclide concentration and the radon exhalation of bricks obtained recycling different types of potentially radioactive wastes: i) trachyte as by-product resulting from quarrying operations, and ii) two different types of industrial sludge derived from ceramic tiles industry. Raw materials were studied to foresee any potential radioactive risk derived from their use as secondary raw materials, while bricks were investigated to assess the influence of mineralogy and texture on their radioactive properties and their effective radon-risk. The results obtained here show that, although radon emanation in bricks is primarily determined by radionuclide concentration in the raw materials, textural features significantly affect radon mobility and exhalation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bbce7c2cae01e3897b16bda8b0d932e4