Anthropogenic Radionuclides

List of anthropogenic nuclides measured by AMS and area of application ©Dr. Sebastian Fichter

Anthropogenic radionuclides are radioactive nuclides produced from humanity’s technological use of nuclear reactions. The first major releases were from the use of nuclear fission and fusion for weapons. The majority of anthropogenic radionuclides released from this source have been dispersed in the environment by atmospheric nuclear weapon tests during the 1950s and 1960s. The second major technological application of nuclear reactions is energy generation from nuclear power plants. Here major releases have resulted from accidents, such as Chernobyl (1986) and Fukushima-Daiichi (2011), or releases from nuclear fuel reprocessing plants. Thus, humanity’s use of nuclear reactions have led to the dispersion of various irradiation products, fission products, and actinides in the environment, which have been spread globally. Obviously, monitoring these nuclides is important as they pose a potential health hazard, but also to track possible illicit nuclear activity (nuclear safeguards and forensics). However, the introduction of these nuclides into the environment has also enabled fundamental studies in different scientific disciplines like geochemistry, soil science, ecology, biology and medicine. Accelerator Mass Spectrometry is capable of determining the content of anthropogenic radionuclides down to a few atoms per gram. Similarly low detection limits are not achievable with any other analytical technique making AMS unique for ultra low-level analysis of radionuclides.

Applications

'Ivy Mike' atmospheric nuclear test - November 1952 ©CTBTO CC BY 4.0

'Ivy Mike' atmospheric nuclear test, November 1952

Bomb-pulse dating. The testing of thermonuclear bombs in the atmosphere, by their epic neutron flux, have increased the 14C level in the atmosphere by up to 100% in 1963, which by today has lowered back to almost previous atmospheric levels, by uptake of the excess into the oceans and the biosphere. However, the spike provides a signal for very accurate dating (in some cases able to pin the actual year), and thus the study of many contemporary biological and ecological processes. On a global scale, the 14C bomb-pulse has also significantly improved our understanding of the carbon cycle.

Coral coring ©U.S. Geological Survey

Coral coring

Oceanic current tracer. Anthropogenic radionuclides provide an interesting opportunity to study the ocean currents and marine geochemistry of trace elements, as they provide a specifically marked, recently injected, signal in the world’s oceans. Radionuclides of elements behaving conservatively in the ocean can be used as ocean current tracers, while those for nutrients and readily sequestered elements can be used to study the temporal dynamics of nutrients transport and sequestration. A good example for an anthropogenic current tracer is 236U, whereas plutonium isotopes are usually readily sequestered, depending on their oxidation state. Bomb-pulse 14C is also a good current tracer, however, at the time of maximum injection and effect very little data could be collected, as AMS was not available as measurement technique at the time. Such data allow valuable insight into ocean-atmosphere gas exchange for CO2, an important factor in understanding the global carbon cycle.

Nuclear power plant Isar ©Preussen Electra GmbH

Nuclear power plant Isar

Nuclear Decommissioning. During the lifetime of nuclear power plants the reactor pressure vessel and surrounding construction materials (i.e. concrete and steel) are constantly bombarded by neutrons from the reactor core. This neutron flux causes the activation of the inherent materials forming radioactive nuclei like 14C, 36Cl, 41Ca, 55Fe, 59/63Ni, 60Co, 99Tc or 152/154Eu. Despite some rather short-lived γ emitting nuclei like 60Co or 152/154Eu most of these nuclides feature relatively long half-lives making them difficult to assess by classical counting techniques. Accelerator mass spectrometry can thus be an alternative method to determine the content of these activation products and aids to set-up sufficient decommissioning strategies for large power plant components.


User Information

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Projects and Collaborations

  • MetroPOEM (Metrology of Pollutants in the Environment by Mass Spectrometry): This project is collaborative EURAMET project as part of the European Green Deal, contributing to the Zero Pollution Ambition. It will establish new SI traceable standard reference materials and best practices for the determination of a series of environmental contaminants by mass spectrometry. It includes radionuclides important for environmental monitoring, a few of which (90Sr, 236U, 239Pu, 240Pu, 241Am) have become important for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, as it turned out to be the most sensitive technique for those. The collaboration includes 22 laboratories across Europe, with HZDR being one of 3 laboratories with accelerator mass spectrometry capability. Funding Period: 10/2022 – 09/2025
  • MARATON (Mass Spectrometric Analysis of difficult-to-measure Radionuclides in activated Concrete Materials): This BMBF funded project is dedicated to the dismantling and decommissioning of nuclear facilities. It aims to develop suitable determination strategies for long-lived beta emitters like 36Cl, 41Ca, 55Fe and 59Ni in activated structure materials from nuclear power plants using different mass spectrometric techniques. This is a planned collaboration with the Institute of Resource Ecology at HZDR, University Hannover and University Mainz. Expected funding period: 06/2023 – 05/2026 (proposal submitted)
  • Joint PhD student with Institute of Resource Ecology (Janis Wolf): This joint PHD program is funded by HZDR’s board of directors and aims to find new pathways for characterizing the content and speciation of 231Pa in environmental samples. This project focuses on the development of separation procedures of Pa for quantitative analysis with Accelerator Mass spectrometry. In addition, fundamental chemical and physical properties of Pa are investigated. Funding period: 09/2022 – 08/2025
  • Joint PhD student with the University of Vienna (Alexander Wieser, start 2022): Development of Ion Laser Interaction Mass Spectrometry for the detection of 135Cs and 137Cs by AMS.
Further Reading

Fundamentals

  • Diamond, H., Fields, P.R., Stevens, C.S., Studier, M.H., Fried, S.M., Inghram, M.G., Hess, D.C., Pyle, G.L., Mech, J. F., Manning, W.M., Ghiorso, A., Thompson, S.G., Higgins, G.H., Seaborg, G.T., Browne, C.I., Smith, H.L. and Spence, R.W. (1960). Heavy isotope abundances in Mike thermonuclear device. Physical Review, 119(6), 2000. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRev.119.2000

Own publications (see also here)

  • Hain, K., Steier, P., Froehlich, M.B., Golser, R., Hou, X., Lachner, J., Nomura, T., Qiao, J., Quinto, F. and Sakaguchi, A. (2020). 233U/236U signature allows to distinguish environmental emissions of civil nuclear industry from weapons fallout. Nature Communications, 11, 1275. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15008-2
  • Winkler, S.R., Eigl, R., Forstner, O., Martschini, M., Steier, P., Sterba, J.H. and Golser, R. (2015). Using the nuclear activation AMS method for determining chlorine in solids at ppb-levels and below. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms, 361, 649-653. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nimb.2015.06.003
  • Quinto, F., Hrnecek, E., Krachler, M., Shotyk, W., Steier, P. and Winkler, S.R. (2013). Determination of 239Pu, 240Pu, 241Pu and 242Pu at femtogram and attogram levels – evidence for the migration of fallout plutonium in an ombrotrophic peat bog profile. Environmental Science: Processes and Impacts, 15, 839-847. https://doi.org/10.1039/C3EM30910J
  • Winkler, S.R., Steier, P. and Carilli, J. (2012). Bomb fall-out 236U as a global oceanic tracer using an annually resolved coral core. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 359-360, 124-130. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.10.004
  • Srncik, M., Hrnecek, E., Steier, P., Wallner, A., Wallner, G. and Bossew, P. (2008). Vertical distribution of 238Pu, 239(40)Pu, 241Am, 90Sr and 137Cs in Austrian soil profiles. Radiochimica Acta, 96, 733-738. https://doi.org/10.1524/ract.2008.1559