Aerosol dynamics and dispersion of radioactive particles
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Published:2021-04-01
Issue:6
Volume:21
Page:5173-5193
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
von Schoenberg PontusORCID, Tunved Peter, Grahn Håkan, Wiedensohler Alfred, Krejci RadovanORCID, Brännström Niklas
Abstract
Abstract. In the event of a failure of a nuclear power plant with release
of radioactive material into the atmosphere, dispersion modelling is used to understand how the released radioactivity is spread. For the dispersion of particles, Lagrangian particle dispersion models (LPDMs) are commonly used, in which model particles, representing the released material, are transported
through the atmosphere. These model particles are usually inert and undergo
only first-order processes such as dry deposition and simplified wet
deposition along the path through the atmosphere. Aerosol dynamic processes
including coagulation, condensational growth, chemical interactions,
formation of new particles and interaction with new aerosol sources are
usually neglected in such models. The objective of this study is to analyse
the impact of these advanced aerosol dynamic processes if they were to be
included in LPDM simulations for use in radioactive preparedness. In
this investigation, a fictitious failure of a nuclear power plant is studied for
three geographically and atmospherically different sites. The incident was
simulated with a Lagrangian single-trajectory box model with a new
simulation for each hour throughout a year to capture seasonal variability
of meteorology and variation in the ambient aerosol. (a) We conclude that modelling of wet deposition by incorporating an advanced cloud
parameterization is advisable, since it significantly influence simulated
levels of airborne and deposited activity including radioactive hotspots,
and (b) we show that inclusion of detailed ambient-aerosol dynamics can play
a large role in the model result in simulations that adopt a more detailed
representation of aerosol–cloud interactions. The results highlight a
potential necessity for implementation of more detailed representation of
general aerosol dynamic processes into LPDMs in order to cover the full
range of possible environmental characteristics that can apply during a release
of radionuclides into the atmosphere.
Funder
Strålsäkerhetsmyndigheten
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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