Studies on the gamma radiation environment in Sweden with special reference to 137Cs
Abstract
Gamma radiation in the environment today mainly originates from naturally occurring radionuclides, but anthropogenic radionuclides, such as 137Cs, contribute in some areas. In order to assess population exposure in case of fallout from nuclear weapons (NWF) or accidents, knowledge and monitoring of external gamma radiation and radionuclide concentrations in the environment is important. For this purpose 34 sampling sites were established in western Sweden and repeated soil sampling, field gamma spectrometry (in situ measurements), and dose rate measurements were performed. The variations in the activities between the different sampling occasions were found to be quite large. The naturally occurring radionuclides were the main source of outdoor dose rates. The uranium and thorium decay series contributed about equally to the total dose while the contribution from 40K was somewhat higher. The dose rates were mainly correlated to the ground cover, with higher levels on asphalt and cobble stones than on grass.
The large scale deposition densities from NWF and the Chernobyl accident could be relatively well estimated by a model including the amount of precipitation and measured deposition at few reference sites. The deposition density from nuclear weapons tests in Sweden between 1962 and 1966 was found to be 1.42-2.70 kBq/m2 and the deposition density from Chernobyl in western Sweden ranged between 0.82-2.61 kBq/m2.
The vertical migration of 137Cs was studied at the sampling sites in western Sweden and a solution to the convection–diffusion equation (CDE) was fitted to depth profiles. The vertical migration of 137Cs was found to be very slow and diffusive transport was dominant at most locations. The apparent convection velocity and diffusion coefficient were found to be 0–0.35 cm/year and 0.06–2.63 cm2/year, respectively. The average depth of the maximum activity was 5.4±2.2 cm. The fitted depth distributions for each location were used to correct in situ measurements and the results agreed relatively well with the 137Cs inventories in soil samples.
A widespread deposition of radionuclides was caused by the Chernobyl accident and parts of Sweden were highly affected. Today, approximately 20 years since the latest deposition, 137Cs can still be measured in the environment and contributes to additional doses to people. However, today people generally spend much time in their dwellings, and therefore, the radiation environment indoors is more important for the personal exposure. Dwelling and personal dose rate measurements in western Sweden (means: 0.099±0.035 µSv/h and 0.094±0.017 µSv/h, respectively) showed that concrete dwellings yield higher dose rates than those of wood. Measurements in a region with a high 137Cs deposition (Hille in eastern Sweden) showed somewhat higher dose rates in wooden dwellings than in western Sweden (0.033 µSv/h and 0.025 µSv/h higher, respectively). The additional contribution from the Chernobyl 137Cs fallout in Hille was estimated to be about 0.2 mSv/year.
Parts of work
I. GIS supported calculations of 137Cs deposition in Sweden based on precipitation data (2006),
Sara Almgren, Elisabeth Nilsson, Bengt Erlandsson & Mats Isaksson
Science of the Total Environment 368, 804-813. ::doi::10.1016/j.scitotenv.2006.03.020 II. Vertical migration studies of 137Cs from nuclear weapons fallout and the
Chernobyl accident (2006),
S. Almgren & M. Isaksson
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 91, 90-102. ::doi::10.1016/j.jenvrad.2006.08.008 III. Gamma radiation doses to people living in Western Sweden (2008),
S. Almgren, M. Isaksson and L. Barregard
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 99, 394-403. ::doi::10.1016/j.jenvrad.2007.10.020 IV. Measurements and comparisons of gamma radiation doses in a high and a low 137Cs deposition area in Sweden (2008),
S. Almgren, L. Barregard and M. Isaksson
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, Article in press. ::doi::10.1016/j.jenvrad.2008.06.013 V. Long-term investigation of anthropogenic and naturally occurring radionuclides at reference sites in western Sweden,
Mats Isaksson & Sara Almgren,
Unpublished manuscript
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Physics ; Institutionen för fysik
Disputation
Fredagen den 26 september 2008, kl. 13.15, Hjärtats Aula, Blå stråket 5, Sahlgrenska Universitetssjukhuset.
Date of defence
2008-09-26
sara.almgren@radfys.gu.se
Date
2008-09-05Author
Almgren, Sara
Keywords
gamma radiation
caesium
137Cs
deposition
migration
precipitation
in situ
CDE
NWF
Chernobyl
soil sampling
field measurements
dose measurements
dose rate
TLD
natural radiation
kriging
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-7583-1
Language
eng