V. Pan et Ka. Stevenson, TEMPORAL VARIATION ANALYSIS OF PLUTONIUM BASE-LINE CONCENTRATION IN SURFACE AIR FROM SELECTED SITES IN THE CONTINENTAL US, Journal of environmental radioactivity, 32(3), 1996, pp. 239-257
The temporal variation of plutonium concentrations in surface air was
assessed for the Us Department of Energy's (DOE) monitoring sites near
Richland, Washington and Chicago, Illinois using historical databases
from the Batelle Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) and the Argonne N
ational Laboratory-East (ANL). The data show that Pu-239.240 air conce
ntrations post-1984 are still detectable with analytical techniques us
ed in monitoring fallout, whereas Pu-238 concentrations are not. These
Pu-239.240 values are suggested to represent a 'post-fallout equilibr
ium' concentration in surface air at the two DOE sites. The PNL and AN
L Pu-239.240 post-1984 average monthly values are mostly between 0.01
and 0.1 mu Bq m(-3) and fall within the range observed in Europe as we
ll as in four other US cities through the US environmental Protection
Agency's Environmental Radiation Ambient Monitoring System (ERAMS) net
work. Temporal analysis of the post-fallout monthly data for PNL and f
or the three sites at ANL show that Pu-239.240 concentrations fall wit
hin a predictable range of limiting values. The month-to-month fluctua
tions are quantified into tolerance limits at the 95% confidence level
in that PNL data yielded a monthly change that was within +/-0.13 mu
Bq m(-3). The limits found for the three ANL sites are +/-0.14 mu Bq m
(-3) for site 12N; +/-0.06 and +/-0.07 mu Bq m(-3) for sites 71 and Of
f-Site, respectively. Magnitudes of the monthly concentration changes
are less than the observed post-fallout concentration ranges of Pu-239
.240, and therefore, may be useful in flagging unexpected sources of p
lutonium in the environment. Copyright (C) 1996 Elsevier Science Limit
ed