Office of Research and Development Publications

Persistence and decontamination of surrogate radioisotopes in a model drinking water distribution system

Citation:

SZABO, J. G., CHRISTOPHER IMPELLITTERI, S. Govindaswamy, AND J. HALL. Persistence and decontamination of surrogate radioisotopes in a model drinking water distribution system. WATER RESEARCH. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, 43(20):5005-5014, (2009).

Impact/Purpose:

Contamination of a model drinking water system with surrogate radioisotopes was examined with respect to persistence on and decontamination of infrastructure surfaces. Cesium and cobalt chloride salts were used as surrogates for cesium-137 and cobalt-60. Studies were conducted in biofilm annular reactors containing heavily corroded iron surfaces formed under shear and constantly submerged in drinking water. Cesium was not detected on the corroded iron surface after equilibration with 10 and 100 mg L-1 solutions of cesium chloride, but cobalt was detected on corroded iron coupons at both initial concentrations. The amount of adhered cobalt decreased over the next six weeks, but we still present when monitoring stopped. X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (XANES) showed that adhered cobalt was in the III oxidation state. The adsorbed cobalt was strongly resistant to decontamination by various physicochemical methods. Simulated flushing, use of free chlorine and dilute ammonia were found to be ineffective whereas use of aggressive methods like 14.5 M ammonia and 0.36 M sulfuric acid removed 37 and 92% of the sorbed cobalt, respectively.

Description:

Journal Article

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:03/03/2009
Record Last Revised:06/08/2011
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 203591