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1.
J Environ Radioact ; 90(2): 110-39, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16939696

ABSTRACT

A dynamic model for assessing the transfer of tritium in a food chain was applied to the Loire River, where 14 nuclear power plants situated on five different sites operate. The model considers several potential exposure pathways in the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems: transfer of tritium through the aquatic food chain (especially fish); use of river water for agricultural purposes (irrigation) and transfer of radionuclides through the terrestrial food chain (vegetables, meat, milk); subsequent internal exposure of humans due to ingestion of contaminated foodstuffs. For biological environmental compartments, the transfer of tritium to organic matter (i.e. OBT) was simulated. For each of the parameters introduced in this model, a probability density function, allowing further uncertainty and sensitivity analyses, was proposed. Uncertainty/sensitivity analyses were performed to determine a confidence interval for the mean annual dose to critical groups and to identify the parameters responsible for the uncertainty and subsequent research priorities.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure/analysis , Food Chain , Models, Theoretical , Radiation Monitoring/methods , Rivers/chemistry , Tritium/analysis , Animals , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Fishes/metabolism , France , Plants/metabolism , Radiation Monitoring/statistics & numerical data
2.
J Environ Radioact ; 87(1): 32-51, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16375996

ABSTRACT

Carbon-14 is a particularly interesting radionuclide from the perspective of dose estimation. Many nuclear facilities, including power reactors, release 14C into the environment, and much of this is as 14CO2. This mixes readily with stable CO2, and hence enters the food chain as fundamental biomolecules. This isotopic mixing is often used as the basis for dose assessment models. The present model was developed for the situation of 14C releases to surface waters, where there are distinct changes in the water 14C activity concentrations throughout the year. Complete isotopic mixing (equilibrium) cannot be assumed. The model computes the specific activity (activity of 14C per mass of total C) in water, phytoplankton, fish, crops, meat, milk and air, following a typical irrigation-based food-chain scenario. For most of the biotic compartments, the specific activity is a function of the specific activity in the previous time step, the specific activity of the substrate media, and the C turnover rate in the tissue. The turnover rate is taken to include biochemical turnover, growth dilution and mortality, recognizing that it is turnover of C in the population, not a tissue or an individual, that is relevant. Attention is paid to the incorporation of 14C into the surface water biota and the loss of any remaining 14CO2 from the surface water-air interface under its own activity concentration gradient. For certain pathways, variants in the conceptual model are presented, in order to fully discuss the possibilities. As an example, a new model of the soil-to-plant specific activity relationship is proposed, where the degassing of both 14C and stable C from the soil is considered. Selection of parameter values to represent the turnover rates as modeled is important, and is dealt with in a companion paper.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Radioactive/adverse effects , Carbon Radioisotopes/analysis , Environmental Monitoring , Food Contamination, Radioactive/analysis , Water Pollution, Radioactive/adverse effects , Animals , Biodiversity , Carbon Dioxide/analysis , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon Radioisotopes/metabolism , Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation , Humans , Kinetics , Milk/metabolism , Milk/radiation effects , Models, Biological , Plants, Edible/metabolism , Plants, Edible/radiation effects , Risk Assessment , Temperature , Zooplankton/metabolism , Zooplankton/radiation effects
3.
J Environ Radioact ; 83(1): 9-48, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15935908

ABSTRACT

A dynamic model for assessing the transfer of several radionuclides ((58)Co, (60)Co, (110 m)Ag, (134)Cs, (137)Cs, (54)Mn and (131)I) in a food-chain was applied on the Loire river, where 14 nuclear power plants situated on five different sites operate. The model considers the following potential exposure pathways: (i) transfer of radionuclides through the aquatic food chain and the subsequent internal exposure of humans due to ingestion of contaminated water and/or fish; (ii) use of river water for agricultural purposes (irrigation), transfer of radionuclides through the terrestrial food chain and the subsequent internal exposure of humans due to ingestion of contaminated foodstuffs; (iii) internal exposure due to inhalation of dust originating from resuspension of contaminated soil particles; (iv) external exposure from radionuclides present in the river or deposited on the river sediments or the soil. For each of the parameters introduced in this model, a probability density function, allowing further uncertainty and sensitivity analysis, was proposed. Uncertainty/sensitivity analysis were performed to: (i) compare calculations to empirical data; (ii) determine a confidence interval for the mean annual dose to critical groups; and (iii) identify the parameters responsible for the uncertainty and subsequent research priorities.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Food Chain , Rivers/chemistry , Water Pollutants, Radioactive/analysis , Animals , Fishes , Humans , Models, Biological , Risk Assessment , Time Factors , Water Pollutants, Radioactive/metabolism
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