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Development of a Novel Passive Monitoring Technique to Showcase the 3D Distribution of Tritiated Water (HTO) Vapor in Indoor Air of a Nuclear Facility

Authors :
Feng, Bin
Ibesich, Martin
Hainz, Dieter
Waidhofer, Daniel
Veit-Öller, Monika
Trunner, Clemens
Stummer, Thomas
Foster, Michaela
Nemetz, Markus
Welch, Jan M.
Villa, Mario
Sterba, Johannes H.
Musilek, Andreas
Renz, Franz
Steinhauser, Georg
Feng, Bin
Ibesich, Martin
Hainz, Dieter
Waidhofer, Daniel
Veit-Öller, Monika
Trunner, Clemens
Stummer, Thomas
Foster, Michaela
Nemetz, Markus
Welch, Jan M.
Villa, Mario
Sterba, Johannes H.
Musilek, Andreas
Renz, Franz
Steinhauser, Georg
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Tritiated water (HTO), a ubiquitous byproduct of the nuclear industry, is a radioactive contaminant of major concern for environmental authorities. Although understanding spatiotemporal heterogeneity of airborne HTO vapor holds great importance for radiological safety as well as diagnosing a reactor’s status, comprehensive HTO distribution dynamics inside nuclear facilities has not been studied routinely yet due to a lack of appropriate monitoring techniques. For current systems, it is difficult to simultaneously achieve high representativeness, sensitivity, and spatial resolution. Here, we developed a passive monitoring scheme, including a newly designed passive sampler and a tailored analytical protocol for the first comprehensive 3D distribution characterization of HTO inside a nuclear reactor facility. The technique enables linear sampling in any environment at a one-day resolution and simultaneous preparation of hundreds of samples within 1 day. Validation experiments confirmed the method’s good metrological properties and sensitivity to the HTO’s spatial dynamics. The air in TU Wien’s reactor hall exhibits a range of 3H concentrations from 75-946 mBq m-3 in the entire 3D matrix. The HTO release rate estimated by the mass-balance model (3199 ± 306 Bq h-1) matches the theoretical calculation (2947 ± 254 Bq h-1), suggesting evaporation as the dominant HTO source in the hall. The proposed method provides reliable and quality-controlled 3D monitoring at low cost, which can be adopted not only for HTO and may also inspire monitoring schemes of other indoor pollutants.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1455214654
Document Type :
Electronic Resource