Iodine effective diffusion coefficients through volcanic rock: Influence of iodine speciation and rock geochemistry

Accurate prediction of the subsurface transport of iodine species is important for the assessment of long-term nuclear waste repository performance, as well as monitoring compliance with the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, given that radioiodine decays into radioxenon. However, the transport...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of contaminant hydrology 2020-11, Vol.235, p.103714, Article 103714
Hauptverfasser: Neil, Chelsea W., Telfeyan, Katherine, Sauer, Kirsten B., Ware, S. Doug, Reimus, Paul, Boukhalfa, Hakim, Roback, Robert, Brug, W. Patrick
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Accurate prediction of the subsurface transport of iodine species is important for the assessment of long-term nuclear waste repository performance, as well as monitoring compliance with the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, given that radioiodine decays into radioxenon. However, the transport of iodine through intact geologic media is not well understood, compromising our ability to assess risk associated with radioiodine migration. The current study's goal is to quantify the matrix diffusion of iodine species through saturated volcanic rock, with particular attention paid to the redox environment and potential speciation changes. Diffusion experiments were run for iodide through lithophysae-rich lava, lithophysae-poor lava, and welded tuff, whereas iodate diffusion was studied through welded tuff. Iodine transport was compared with a conservative tracer, HDO, and effective diffusion coefficients were calculated. Likely due to a combination of size and anion exclusion effects, iodine species diffused more slowly than the conservative tracer through all rock types tested. Furthermore, oxidation of iodide to iodate was observed in the lithophysae-poor lava, affecting transport. Results provide much needed data for subsurface transport models that predict radioiodine migration from underground sources, and indicate the pressing need for geochemical and redox interactions to be incorporated into these models. •Matrix diffusion of iodide and iodate was quantified through volcanic rock cores.•Anion and size exclusion retarded iodine species relative to a conservative tracer•Oxidation of iodide was observed in the lithophysae-poor lava system.•Rock hydraulic conductivity was altered in systems with iodate present.
ISSN:0169-7722
1873-6009
DOI:10.1016/j.jconhyd.2020.103714