The Hanford Site in eastern Washington produced plutonium for several decades and in the process generated billions of gallons of radioactive waste. Included in this complex mixture of waste was 50 Ci of iodine-129 ({sup 129}I). Iodine-129’s high abundance, due to its high fission yield, and extreme toxicity result in iodine-129 becoming a key risk driver at many Department of Energy (DOE) sites. The mobility of radioiodine in arid environments, such as the Hanford Site, depends largely on its chemical speciation and is also greatly affected by many other environmental factors, especially natural sediment organic matter (SOM). Groundwater radioiodine speciation has not been measured in arid regions with major plumes or large disposed {sup 1...
Novel detection and analysis methods for radioactive iodine concentration and speciation were invest...
Radionuclides, 129I and 239,240Pu, are major products or by-products of nuclear fission and among th...
Iodine-129 (t ½, 16 My) is a naturally-occurring tracer which can be used to study hydrologic and ge...
The geochemical transport and fate of radioiodine depends largely on its chemical speciation that is...
Iodine-129 ({sup 129}I) has not received as much attention in basic and applied research as other co...
Field and laboratory studies were carried out to understand the cause for steady increases in {sup 1...
Abstract—129I is a major by-product of nuclear fission that is of concern because of its extremely l...
Iodine is a biophilic element, with one stable isotope, I-127, and one long-lived radioisotope, I-12...
Iodine is a biophilic element with one natural long-lived isotope, 129I (t1/2= 15.6 million years), ...
129I is a fission product with a long half-life (1.57 x 107 yrs) that has important implications as ...
Iodine-129 is a naturally and anthropogenically produced radioisotope (half-life: 15.7 million years...
The objectives of this report were to: provide a current state of the science of radioiodine biogeoc...
Iodine-129 is one of the key risk drivers for several Savannah River Site (SRS) performance assessme...
I-129, a long-lived radionuclide, is important in view of geological repository of nuclear waste, an...
A technique was developed to extract iodine from groundwaters with very low concentrations of iodine...
Novel detection and analysis methods for radioactive iodine concentration and speciation were invest...
Radionuclides, 129I and 239,240Pu, are major products or by-products of nuclear fission and among th...
Iodine-129 (t ½, 16 My) is a naturally-occurring tracer which can be used to study hydrologic and ge...
The geochemical transport and fate of radioiodine depends largely on its chemical speciation that is...
Iodine-129 ({sup 129}I) has not received as much attention in basic and applied research as other co...
Field and laboratory studies were carried out to understand the cause for steady increases in {sup 1...
Abstract—129I is a major by-product of nuclear fission that is of concern because of its extremely l...
Iodine is a biophilic element, with one stable isotope, I-127, and one long-lived radioisotope, I-12...
Iodine is a biophilic element with one natural long-lived isotope, 129I (t1/2= 15.6 million years), ...
129I is a fission product with a long half-life (1.57 x 107 yrs) that has important implications as ...
Iodine-129 is a naturally and anthropogenically produced radioisotope (half-life: 15.7 million years...
The objectives of this report were to: provide a current state of the science of radioiodine biogeoc...
Iodine-129 is one of the key risk drivers for several Savannah River Site (SRS) performance assessme...
I-129, a long-lived radionuclide, is important in view of geological repository of nuclear waste, an...
A technique was developed to extract iodine from groundwaters with very low concentrations of iodine...
Novel detection and analysis methods for radioactive iodine concentration and speciation were invest...
Radionuclides, 129I and 239,240Pu, are major products or by-products of nuclear fission and among th...
Iodine-129 (t ½, 16 My) is a naturally-occurring tracer which can be used to study hydrologic and ge...