Physics
Scientific paper
Mar 1996
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1996gecoa..60..995s&link_type=abstract
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Volume 60, Issue 6, p. 995-1004.
Physics
6
Scientific paper
In determining the mobility of ions in sediments it is important to take account of the solid phase sorption and speciation. Measurements were made of activity depth profiles of 137Cs from fallout from Nuclear Weapons Testing and from the Chernobyl accident in two lake sediments. The fraction of 137Cs in the aqueous, exchangeably sorbed and “fixed” phases was determined at each depth interval. A model was developed to simulate the transport of 137Cs in these sediments, taking account of changes in sorption properties as the concentration of the competing ammonium ion changes with depth, as well as transfers of activity to less-exchangeable sites on the solids. The model simulations give reasonable agreement with experimental data, and the fitted rate constant for slow transfers to less-exchangeable sites (T1/2 = 50 125 d) is in agreement with independent measurements. The modelling gave evidence for a reverse reaction from less-exchangeable to exchangeable sites with a half-life of order 10 y. Model results were compared with those generated by a physical mixing model and the standard molecular diffusion model assuming equilibrium sorption to the solid phase. Estimates were made of the remobilisation of Chernobyl 137Cs from these sediments to the water column: predicted rates vary from around 3% of the inventory per year 2 years after the fallout event to 0.04% per year 30 years after the fallout.
Comans Rob N. J.
Smith Torquil J.
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