Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2022

Presentation information

[J] Oral

M (Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary) » M-AG Applied Geosciences

[M-AG39] Radioisotope migration: New development for dynamics study of radionuclides from 1F NPP accident

Mon. May 23, 2022 1:45 PM - 3:15 PM 202 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Daisuke Tsumune(Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry), convener:Yuichi Onda(Center for Research on Isotopes and Environmental Dynamics, University of Tsukuba), Yoshio Takahashi(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo), convener:Akira Kirishima(Tohoku University), Chairperson:Daisuke Tsumune(Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry), Akira Kirishima(Tohoku University)

1:45 PM - 2:00 PM

[MAG39-01] Measurement technique for tritium in the atmospheric environment

★Invited Papers

*Naofumi Akata1, Masahiro Tanaka2, Shigekazu Hirao3, Toshiya Tamari4, Hideki Kakiuchi5, Shinji Sugihara6, Haruka Kuwata1, Hirofumi Tazoe1 (1.Hirosaki University, 2.National Instutute for Fusion Science, 3.Fukushima University, 4.Kyushu Environmental Evaluation Association, 5.Institute for Environmental Sciences, 6.Kyushu University)

Keywords:tritium, atmospheric environment

Tritium (3H; T1/2 = 12.3 y) is the radioisotope of hydrogen and it decays to 3He; the main sources of environmental tritium are natural, although there are some artificial sources. The 99% of environmental tritium exists in water vapor, rainwater, landwater and seawater as a chemical form of HTO , and moves on the earth surface according to water cycle. It is common to use a low background liquid scintillation counter for tritium measurement in general environment. On the other hand, atmospheric tritium have three chemical form which are water vapor (HTO), hydrogen (HT) and hydrocarbons (mainly CH3T), they are separately collected as water after oxidation for measurement.
This presentation reports the measurement technique for tritium in the atmospheric environment.