54 research outputs found
Space-time monitoring of prescribed burnt soils performance – an effective tool for forest management
Among the most important measures to prevent wild forest fires is the use of prescribed and controlled
burning actions in order to reduce the availability of fuel mass. However, the impact of these activities on
soil physical and chemical properties varies according to the type of both soil and vegetation and is not fully
understood. Therefore, soil monitoring campaigns are often used to measure these impacts. In this paper we
have successfully used three statistical data treatments - the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test followed by the
ANOVA and the Kruskall-Wallis tests – to investigate the variability among the soil pH, soil moisture, soil
organic matter and soil iron variables for different monitoring times and sampling procedures
A importância da fragmentação das paisagens urbanas na Grande Área Metropolitana do Porto para a modelização das ilhas de calor urbano : uma abordagem metodológica
The way the countless pieces of the urban puzzle are distributed in space and how they are carved on natural soil as well as the fluidity, with which each piece interacts with all the others, is crucial to determine the (un)success of these artificial landscapes. This success may be seen in a countless number of positive impacts and / or negative impacts on the ecosystem in which it operates. The human health and wellbeing is one of many possible signs for assessing the performance of an urban form, for example, in modifying the climatic context and the quality of atmospheric air. In this sense, all methodologies that give more objectivity to urban forms classification are very useful to help the understanding these cause-effect relationships. In this exercise, was used the methodological strategy of Schwarz (2010), to classify the variety of urban forms in the Porto’s Greater Metropolitan Area (GAMP), which is already known, created profound changes in local and regional climate and generated a severe increase in the risks to human health due to the amplification of the negative effects of some episodes thermal extremes. The results of this exercise allowed us to adjust in a more objective way the shape and magnitude of positive thermal anomalies suggested by the formula of Oke (1973) application to the GAMP
Assessment of direct radiological risk and indirect associated toxic risks originated by Coal-Fired Power Plants
Over the past few decades there has been some discussion concerning the increase of the natural background radiation originated by coal-fired power plants, due to the uranium and thorium content present in combustion ashes. The radioactive decay products of uranium and thorium, such as radium, radon, polonium, bismuth and lead, are also released in addition to a significant amount of 40K.
Since the measurement of radioactive elements released by the gaseous emissions of coal power plants is not compulsory, there is a gap of information concerning this situation. Consequently, the prediction of dispersion and mobility of these elements in the environment, after their release, is based on limited data and the radiological impact from the exposure to these radioactive elements is unknown. This paper describes the methodology that is being developed to assess the radiological impact due to the raise in the natural background radiation level originated by the release and dispersion of the emitted radionuclides. The current investigation is part of a research project that is undergoing in the vicinity of Sines coal-fired power plant (south of Portugal) until 2013. Data from preliminary stages are already available and possible of interpretation
Modelling the Contribution of 40K, 232Th and 226Ra to Radiation Dose and Risk from Airborne Discharges of Coal-Fired Power Plants
Coal contains trace elements and naturally occurring radionuclides such as 40K,
232Th, 238U. When coal is burned, minerals, including most of the radionuclides, do
not burn and concentrate in the ash several times in comparison with their content in
coal. Usually, a small fraction of the fly ash produced (2-5%) is released into the
atmosphere.
The activities released depend on many factors (concentration in coal, ash content
and inorganic matter of the coal, combustion temperature, ratio between bottom and
fly ash, filtering system). Therefore, marked differences should be expected between
the by-products produced and the amount of activity discharged (per unit of energy
produced) from different coal-fired power plants. In fact, the effects of these releases
on the environment due to ground deposition have been received some attention but
the results from these studies are not unanimous and cannot be understood as a
generic conclusion for all coal-fired power plants.
In this study, the dispersion modelling of natural radionuclides was carried out to
assess the impact of continuous atmospheric releases from a selected coal plant.
The natural radioactivity of the coal and the fly ash were measured and the
dispersion was modelled by a Gaussian plume estimating the activity concentration
at different heights up to a distance of 20 km in several wind directions.
External and internal doses (inhalation and ingestion) and the resulting risk were
calculated for the population living within 20 km from the coal plant. In average, the
effective dose is lower than the ICRP’s limit and the risk is lower than the U.S. EPA’s
limit. Therefore, in this situation, the considered exposure does not pose any risk.
However, when considering the dispersion in the prevailing wind direction, these
values are significant due to an increase of 232Th and 226Ra concentrations in 75%
and 44%, respectively
Radiation dose rates and exposure associated to Technologically Enhanced Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (TENORM) at locations of a Portuguese coal-fired power plant
Coal contains trace quantities of natural radionuclides such as Th-232, U-235, U-238, as well as their radioactive decay products and 40K. These radionuclides can be released as fly ash in atmospheric emissions from coal-fired power plants, dispersed into the environment and deposited on the surrounding top soils. Therefore, the natural radiation background level is enhanced and consequently increase the total dose for the nearby population.
A radiation monitoring programme was used to assess the external dose contribution to the natural radiation background, potentially resulting from the dispersion of coal ash in past atmospheric emissions. Radiation measurements were carried out by gamma spectrometry in the vicinity of a Portuguese coal-fired power plant. The radiation monitoring was achieved both on and off site, being the boundary delimited by a 20 km circle centered in the stacks of the coal plant.
The measured radionuclides concentrations for the uranium and thorium series ranged from 7.7 to 41.3 Bq/kg for Ra-226 and from 4.7 to 71.6 Bq/kg for Th-232, while K-40 concentrations ranged from 62.3 to 795.1 Bq/kg. The highest values were registered near the power plant and at distances between 6 and 20 km from the stacks, mainly in the prevailing wind direction. The absorbed dose rates were calculated for each sampling location: 13.97-84.00 ηGy/h, while measurements from previous studies carried out in 1993 registered values in the range of 16.6-77.6 ηGy/h. The highest values were registered at locations in the prevailing wind direction (NW-SE).
This study has been primarily done to assess the radiation dose rates and exposure to the nearby population in the surroundings of a coal-fired power plant. The results suggest an enhancement or at least an influence in the background radiation due to the coal plant past activities
Radioactivity levels of 238U and 232Th decay series and related dose rates in the surroundings of a coal power plant using high resolution g-spectrometry
Gamma radiations measurements were carried out in the vicinity of a coal-fired power plant located in the southwest coastline of Portugal. Two different gamma detectors were used to assess the environmental radiation within a circular area of 20 km centred in the coal plant: a scintillometer (SPP2 NF, Saphymo) and a high purity germanium detector (HPGe, Canberra). Fifty urban and suburban measurements locations were established within the defined area and two measurements campaigns were carried out. The results of the total gamma radiation ranged from 20.83 to 98.33 counts per second (c.p.s.) for both measurement campaigns and outdoor doses rates ranged from 77.65 to 366.51 Gy/h. Natural emitting nuclides from the U-238 and Th-232 decay series were identified as well as the natural emitting nuclide K-40. The radionuclide concentration from the uranium and thorium series determined by gamma spectrometry ranged from 0.93 to 73.68 Bq/kg, while for K-40 the concentration ranged from 84.14 to 904.38 Bq/kg. The obtained results were used primarily to define the variability in measured environmental radiation and to determine the coal plant’s influence in the measured radiation levels. The highest values were measured at two locations near the power plant and at locations between the distance of 6 and 20 km away from the stacks, mainly in the prevailing wind direction. The results showed an increase or at least an influence from the coal-fired plant operations, both qualitatively and quantitatively
On sampling collection procedure effectiveness for forest soil characterization
One of the most important measures to prevent wild forest fires is the use of prescribed and controlled burning actions as it reduce the fuel mass availability. The impact of these management activities on soil physical and chemical properties varies according to the type of both soil and vegetation. Decisions in forest management plans are often based on the results obtained from soil-monitoring campaigns. Those campaigns are often man-labor intensive and expensive. In this paper we have successfully used the multivariate statistical technique Robust Principal Analysis Compounds (ROBPCA) to investigate on the sampling procedure effectiveness for two different methodologies, in order to reflect on the possibility of simplifying and reduce the sampling collection process and its auxiliary laboratory analysis work towards a cost-effective and competent forest soil characterization
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