Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-30T23:48:27.902Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ecological half-life of I-131 in milk after dry and wet radionuclide deposition due to the Chernobyl accident

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2009

I. Zvonova
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene, ul. Mira, 8, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia
A. Bratilova
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene, ul. Mira, 8, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia
T. Jesko
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene, ul. Mira, 8, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia
S. Sarycheva
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene, ul. Mira, 8, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia
M. Fomintceva
Affiliation:
Research Institute of Radiation Hygiene, ul. Mira, 8, 197101 St. Petersburg, Russia
Get access

Abstract

Numerous measurements of 131I concentration in milk following the Chernobyl accident have shown a wide range of clarification half-life values. By results of spectrometric measurements of the milk, performed in 1986 in Tula region (Russia), a connection between a 131I decreasing half-life in milk and a level of radioactive contamination in a locality and a level of precipitation during passage of a radioactive cloud is analysed. Values of the 131I half-life in milk increase from 3.0 d at the smallest area contamination by 137Cs to 5.5–6.0 d at the contamination above the 200 kBq/m2. The half-life of 131I removal from milk depends on the precipitation level at the time of radioactive fallouts in places of milk sampling. Tef increases from 2.8–3.5 d (dry deposition) to the value 5.5–6.0 with precipitation increasing up to 6–9 mm. The half-life value does not change with further precipitation increase. This finding should be taken into account in thyroid dose estimations for inhabitants of contaminated areas.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© EDP Sciences, 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Russian Ministry of Public Health. MU 2.6.1.1000-00 (2000). Moscow: (2001) 61 p.
Zvonova, I.A., Balonov, M.I., A.A. Bratilova. Radiatin Protection Dosimetry 79, 175178 (1998). CrossRef
Kirchner G. Health Physics 66, 653–664 (1994).