Geochemical controls of iodine uptake and transport in Savannah River Site subsurface sediments Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Because iodine-129 has a half-life of nearly 16 million years, poses major health threats, and can be mobile in the environment, it is important to use the best estimates for kinetics of sorption in risk assessment models. Previous work estimating the iodine sorption has not allowed for samples to reach full equilibrium and field studies have reported significant fractions of up to three major species of iodine; therefore, further research into the kinetics of iodine sorption to sediments is warranted. The objective of this study is to investigate the kinetics of iodine sorption in the presence of subsurface upland sediments and wetland sediments from an area within an 129I plume at the Savannah River Site in Aiken, SC. Batch sorption studies for these systems took longer than 8weeks to reach equilibrium, which is significant as previous studies did not reach such timescales. In addition, experiments were conducted under oxic and anoxic conditions. Results confirm that there are three species present in these systems (iodide, iodate, and organo-iodine) with a majority as organo-iodine species at equilibrium for systems with high organic matter content. It is notable that the anoxic conditions exhibited reduced sorption for the iodate species to wetland sediment with high organic matter. 2014 Elsevier Ltd.

published proceedings

  • APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY

author list (cited authors)

  • Emerson, H. P., Xu, C., Ho, Y., Zhang, S., Schwehr, K. A., Lilley, M., ... Powell, B. A.

citation count

  • 22

complete list of authors

  • Emerson, Hilary P||Xu, Chen||Ho, Yi-Fang||Zhang, S||Schwehr, Kathleen A||Lilley, Michael||Kaplan, Daniel I||Santschi, Peter H||Powell, Brian A

publication date

  • June 2014