Literature DB >> 28062225

Pb-210 and Po-210 atmospheric releases via fly ash from oil shale-fired power plants.

Taavi Vaasma1, Jüri Loosaar2, Francis Gyakwaa3, Madis Kiisk3, Banu Özden4, Alan H Tkaczyk3.   

Abstract

During high temperature processes in the furnace volatile and semi-volatile elements and radionuclides are partially emitted to the environment, depending on their chemical form in the original fuel, the technological set-up of the combustion system, and the prevailing combustion conditions. Two of the world's largest oil shale-fired power plants (PPs) have been operational in Estonia from the 1960s, during which time creation of significant environmental emissions and waste containing naturally occurring radionuclides has occurred. Pb-210 and 210Po are considered natural radionuclides with the highest emission rates from PPs and possess elevated potential radiation exposure risks to humans and the environment. These radionuclides have the highest activity concentration values in fine ash fractions, especially in fractions remaining below 2.5 μm. To determine the activity concentrations of 210Pb and 210Po in the PPs' outlet, sampling was conducted from boilers operating on pulverized fuel (PF) technology with novel integrated desulphurization (NID) system and bag filters as well as with electrostatic precipitators (ESPs). The 210Pb and 210Po activity concentrations remained around 300 Bq kg-1 for the NID system compared to 60-80 Bq kg-1 in the ESP system. The dominant ash fraction in both systems was PM2.5, constituting over 50% of the fly ash mass collected from the outlet. The authors estimate that the total atmospherically emitted activity for the modernized PPs remains dominantly below 1% of the activity that is inserted via fuel. The implementation of higher efficiency purifications systems has significantly reduced the negative effect of these PPs. Based on annually emitted fly ash and boilers' working hours, the 210Pb and 210Po activity released relative to energy production were up to 68.3 kBq GWhel-1 for 210Pb and 64.6 kBq GWhel-1 for 210Po. These values are 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower compared to the situation in the 1980s. These findings represent the first publicly available quantitative results estimating the 210Po emissions from large oil shale-fired PPs.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Keywords:  Atmospheric emissions; Fossil fuel; Lead-210; NORM; Polonium-210

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28062225     DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2016.12.054

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Pollut        ISSN: 0269-7491            Impact factor:   8.071


  1 in total

1.  Heavy Metal Pollution and Ecological Assessment around the Jinsha Coal-Fired Power Plant (China).

Authors:  Xianfei Huang; Jiwei Hu; Fanxin Qin; Wenxuan Quan; Rensheng Cao; Mingyi Fan; Xianliang Wu
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2017-12-18       Impact factor: 3.390

  1 in total

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