AI Article Synopsis

  • Since 1952, the Sellafield nuclear complex has released 276 kg of liquid radioactive effluent, mainly containing plutonium, into the Irish Sea, concentrating transuranic activity in the Mudpatch sediments off the Cumbrian coast.
  • Leaching experiments on contaminated sediments from the Esk Estuary revealed that plutonium (Pu) leaching is significantly higher under anoxic conditions, suggesting environmental factors greatly influence its mobility.
  • Microbial communities in the sediments change with varying conditions, and results show that Pu leaching is greater in shallow sediments and does not correlate with total Pu, indicating a complex biogeochemical behavior.

Article Abstract

Since 1952, liquid radioactive effluent containingPu, Am, Np, Cs, and Tc has been released with authorization from the Sellafield nuclear complex (UK) into the Irish Sea. This represents the largest source of plutonium (Pu) discharged in all western Europe, with 276 kg having been released. In the Eastern Irish Sea, the majority of the transuranic activity has settled into an area of sediments (Mudpatch) located off the Cumbrian coast. Radionuclides from the Mudpatch have been re-dispersed via particulate transport in fine-grained estuarine and intertidal sediments to the North-East Irish Sea, including the intertidal saltmarsh located at the mouth of the Esk Estuary. Saltmarshes are highly dynamic systems which are vulnerable to external agents (sea level change, erosion, sediment supply, and freshwater inputs), and their stability remains uncertain under current sea level rise projections and possible increases in storm activity. In this work, we examined factors affecting Pu mobility in contaminated sediments collected from the Esk Estuary by conducting leaching experiments under both anoxic and oxic conditions. Leaching experiments were conducted over a 9-month period and were periodically sampled to determine solution phase Pu via multicollector-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS), and to measure redox indicators (Eh, pH and extractable Fe(II)). Microbial community composition was also characterized in the sediments, and at the beginning and end of the anoxic/oxic experiments. Results show that: 1) Pu leaching is about three times greater in solutions leached under anoxic conditions compared to oxic conditions, 2) the sediment slurry microbial communities shift as conditions change from anoxic to oxic, 3) Pu leaching is enhanced in the shallow sediments (0-10 cm depth), and 4) the magnitude of Pu leached from sediments is not correlated with total Pu, indicating that the biogeochemistry of sediment-associated Pu is spatially heterogeneous. These findings provide constraints on the stability of redox sensitive Pu in biogeochemically dynamic/transient environments on a timescale of months and suggests that anoxic conditions can enhance Pu mobility in estuarine systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2022.136240DOI Listing

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