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Release of natural radionuclides from NORM-residues caused by sewage J. Dilling 1, K. Flesch 2, R. Gellermann 3, J. Gerler 1, H. Hummrich 2, V. Neumann.

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Presentation on theme: "Release of natural radionuclides from NORM-residues caused by sewage J. Dilling 1, K. Flesch 2, R. Gellermann 3, J. Gerler 1, H. Hummrich 2, V. Neumann."— Presentation transcript:

1 Release of natural radionuclides from NORM-residues caused by sewage J. Dilling 1, K. Flesch 2, R. Gellermann 3, J. Gerler 1, H. Hummrich 2, V. Neumann 4, R. Knappik 5, H. Schulz 2 1 Federal Office for Radiation Protection, Berlin 2 IAF - Radioökologie GmbH, Dresden 3 FUGRO-HGN GmbH, Magdeburg 4 BGD, Dresden 5 VKTA, Rossendorf 2nd Workshop of the European ALARA Network for NORM, Dresden 2009

2 Legal Framework Introduction of surveillance limits depending on the recycling or disposal option If exceeding SLs site specific dose assessments (realistic scenarios, parameters, models) formal release of surveillance necessary Precondition: D < 1mSv/a (members of the public) Radiation Protection Ordinance  Positive List joint disposal depending on specific activity and landfill parameters

3 — inhalation of Radon and its decay products — inhalation of contaminated dust — direct ingestion of contaminated soil — exposure to external gamma radiation — ingestion of locally produced food (incl. drinking water) Dose assessment Pathways of concern  grown on contaminated sites  irrigation with contaminated water

4 Dose assessment Pathway: Ingestion of locally produced food focussing on water disposed or recycled NORM seepage water ground water well surface water source term: which radionuclide concentrations will be released?

5 Approach Crosslink conventional hazards Standard methods for assessing waste and contaminated soil regarding potential groundwater contaminations Present study  Feasibility study regarding methodical approaches — soil saturation extract — pH-Stat — elution with water (1:10, 1:2 respectively) — column experiments

6 Approach Soil saturation extract (technical realisation) original sample + deion. water to moisten completely, keeping 24 h at 5°C adding water until flow limit is reached, keeping another 24 h at 5°C centrifugation and filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm)

7 original sample + deion. water to moisten completely, keeping 24 h at 5°C adding water until flow limit is reached, keeping another 24 h at 5°C centrifugation and filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm) Methodical advantages and disadvantages — close to reality material/water ratio (+) — no fixed water / solid ratio (-) — small sample volume (5-30ml /100g) (-) — not convenient for very fine and very coarse textured material (-) Approach Soil saturation extract

8 Approach pH-Stat (technical realisation) field moist sample + deion. Water (1:10), 24 h stirring, adding HNO 3 by means of an automatic titrator until pH 4 filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm)

9 Approach pH-Stat field moist sample + deion. Water (1:10), 24 h stirring, adding HNO 3, by means of an automatic titrator until pH 4 filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm) Methodical advantages and disadvantages — determination of the leachable contaminants according to a worst-case scenario (+) — information of buffering capacity (+) — no pH-Stat experiment at low pH value (<4) (-)

10 Approach Elution with water 1:10 and 1:2 (technical realisation) field moist sample + deion. Water (1:10, 1:2 respectively) 24 h overhead-rotating shaker at room temperature filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm)

11 Approach Elution with water 1:10 and 1:2 field moist sample + deion. Water (1:10, 1:2 respectively) 24 h overhead-rotating shaker at room temperature filtration with membrane filters (pore size 0,45 µm) Methodical advantages and disadvantages — leachate volume large enough for the following analysis (+) — abrasion of particles during the extraction procedure (-) — 1:10 material/water ratio: excess water 1:2 material/water ratio closer to reality (see soil sat. Extract)

12 Approach Column experiment – experimental setup insert sample in column, wetting from downside up within 24 h keeping 24 h at 10°C exchange of one pore volume within 24 h intermittently driven 6-20x

13 Approach „steady-state“ Column experiment – end of experiment „quasi steady state“ situation  no alteration in physico-chemical properties like pH, redox-potential

14 Approach „steady-state“ Column experiment – end of experiment „quasi steady state“ situation  no alteration in physico-chemical properties like pH, redox-potential

15 Approach Determining the source term column experiment C t soil saturation extract elution with water 1:10 elution with water 1:2 t different concentration levels expected !!

16 Approach 28 different NORM residues investigated — slags from primary metallurgic processes in the raw iron and non- ferrous metallurgy — sludges and dust from the smoke gas filtering with the primary metallurgic processes in the raw iron and non-ferrous metallurgy — sludges and sediments from the recovery of oil and natural gas (Scales) — red mud from the extraction of bauxite — tailings from the extraction of uranium — residues of water treatment facilities

17 Approach — U-238 series: U-238, Th-230, Ra-226, Pb-210, (Po-210) — U-235 series: Ac-227 — Th-232 series: Ra-228, Th-228, (Th-232) — K-40 Residue — U-238, Ra-226, Pb-210, Ra-228 (Th-228, Ac-227, Po-210) — Major ions: Cl -, HCO 3-, SO 4 2-, Na +, K +, Ca 2+, Mg 2+ — pH, electrical conductivity Leachate Analysing methods — Gamma spectrometry — Alpha spectrometry — Liquid Scintillation Counting (LSC) — ICP-MS Analysed parameters

18 Results Data mining activity-concentration scaled on pore volume a i PV of undisturbed soil: a i leachate : activity-concentration in leachate [Bq/l] WF: Water/material ratio [l/kg]  d : oven-dry density [g/cm³] n: porosity leachable fraction R i : A i : specific activity [Bq/kg] Different water / solid ratios  results not comparble  normalisation required

19 Results U-238 activity concentration scaled on pore volume Due to the acidification during the pH-Stat experiment trends to result in highest concentration

20 Results U-238 leachable fraction Tailings: close to 100% release feasible

21 Results Ra-226 activity concentration scaled on pore volume Due to the acidification during the pH-Stat experiment trends to result in highest concentration

22 Results Ra-226 leachable fraction Low leachable fraction for demercurised residues and scales

23 Results Pb-210 activity concentration scaled on pore volume Highest concentration due to the acidification during the pH- Stat experiment are evident

24 Results Pb-210 leachable fraction Elevated leachable fraction for sinter dust and water work residues

25 Results Data mining column experiments relative leached load F i rel m : mass of material in column [kg] Ai: specific activity [Bq/kg] a i leachate,n : activity conc. in n-th leachate [Bq/l] V leachate,n : volume n-th leachate [l] total leached load A i n,abs

26 Results Theisen sludge – intermittently driven column experiment

27 Results Theisen sludge – comparison between different leaching methods

28 Results Tailings – intermittently driven column experiment

29 Results Tailings – comparison between different leaching methods

30 Conclusions — This present study is the first complex investigation about the release of radionuclides by sewage from NORM. — The soil saturation extract offers only a marginal sample volume, meaning the determination of radionuclides is in many cases impossible. — The elution with water is easy to handle and gives qualitative informations about the radionuclides released. — Caused by the lowered pH of 4 the results of pH-Stat experiments show, as expected, higher activity concentrations compared to other methods.

31 Conclusions — The realisation of intermittently driven column experiments is more sophisticated compared to batch experiments, but the results offer informations about time depending leaching of radionuclides. — No alteration in the physico-chemical properties (e.g. pH and redox-potential) assumed the electric conductivity is a suitable parameter to determine „quasi steady-state“ conditions. — The transferability of the well-established methods (elution with water, the pH-Stat, intermittently driven column experiments) from waste legislation on radiological purposes could be shown.

32 Thank you for your attention


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