Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5753883 Journal of Aerosol Science 2017 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Due to radioactive decay, radioactive aerosols are inherently multicomponent.•Charging and coagulation of radioactive aerosols are affected by aerosol composition.•Coupled kinetic models of charging, coagulation, and radioactive decay are developed.

Compositional changes by the decay of radionuclides in radioactive aerosols can influence their charging state, coagulation frequency and size distribution throughout their atmospheric lifetime. The importance of such effects is unknown as they have not been considered in microphysical and global radioactivity transport studies to date. We explore the effects of compositional changes on the charging efficiency and coagulation rates of aerosols using a set of kinetic equations that couple all relevant processes (decay, charging and coagulation) and their evolution over time. Compared to a coupled aggregation-tracer model for the prediction of the radioactive composition of particulates undergoing coagulation, our kinetic approach can provide similar results using much less central processing unit time. Together with other considerations, our approach is computational efficient enough to allow implementation in 3D atmospheric transport models. The decay of radionuclides and the production of decay products within radioactive aerosols may significantly affect the aerosol charging rates, and either hinder or promote the coagulation of multicomponent radioactive aerosols. These results suggest that radiological phenomena occurring within radioactive aerosols, as well as subsequent effects on aerosol microphysics, should be considered in regional and global models to more accurately predict radioactivity transport in the atmosphere in case of a nuclear plant accident.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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