Influence of the accumulation chamber insertion depth to measure surface radon exhalation rates
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Abstract
A common method to measure radon exhalation rates relies on the accumulation chamber technique. Usually,
this approach only considers one-dimensional gas transport within the soil that neglects lateral diffusion.
However, this lateral transport could reduce the reliability of the method. In this work, several cylindricalshaped
accumulation chambers were built with different heights to test if the insertion depth of the chamber into
the soil improves the reliability of the method and, in that case, if it could limit the radon lateral diffusion effects.
To check this hypothesis in laboratory, two reference exhalation boxes were manufactured using phosphogypsum
from a repository located nearby the city of Huelva, in the southwest of Spain. Laboratory experiments
showed that insertion depth had a deep impact in reducing the effective decay constant of the system, extending
the interval where the linear fitting can be applied, and consistently obtaining reliable exhalation measurements
once a minimum insertion depth is employed. Field experiments carried out in the phosphogypsum repository
showed that increasing the insertion depth could reduce the influence of external effects, increasing the repeatability
of the method. These experiments provided a method to obtain consistent radon exhalation measurements
over the phosphogypsum repository.
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Bibliographic citation
Gutiérrez-Álvarez, I., Guerrero, J. L., Martín, J. E., Adame, J. A., & Bolívar, J. P. (2020). Influence of the accumulation chamber insertion depth to measure surface radon exhalation rates. In Journal of Hazardous Materials (Vol. 393, p. 122344). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.122344














