Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9825175 | Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2005 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
This paper presents a new general, process-based river model for substances such as radionuclides from single pulse fallouts. The new model has been critically tested using data from 13 European rivers contaminated by radiocesium from the Chernobyl accident. This modelling approach gives radionuclide concentrations in water (total, dissolved and particulate phases; and also concentrations in sediments and fish, but the latter aspects are not discussed in this paper) at defined river sites. The model is based on processes in the upstream river stretch and in the upstream catchment area. The catchment area is differentiated into inflow (âdry land) areas and outflow (âwetland) areas. The model also accounts for time-dependent fixation of substances in the catchment. The catchment area sub-model is based on a previous catchment model, which has been tested with very good results for radiocesium, radiostrontium and Ca-concentrations (from liming operations). The new river model is simple to apply in practice since all driving variables may be readily accessed from maps and standard monitoring programs. The driving variables are: latitude, altitude, continentality, catchment area, mean annual precipitation, soil type (percentages or organic and sandy soils), fallout and month of fallout. Modelled values have been compared to independent empirical data from 10 rivers sites (91 data on radiocesium in water) covering a wide domain (catchment areas from 4000 to 180â000Â km2, precipitation from 500 to 960Â mm/yr and fallout from 1700 to 660â000Â Bq/m2). The new model predicts very well - when modelled values are compared to empirical data, the slope is perfect (1.0) and the r2-value is 0.90. This is good giving the fact that there are also uncertainties in the empirical data, which set a limit to the achieved predictive power, as expressed by the r2-value.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
Lars HÃ¥kanson,