Abstract

The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident on March 11, 2011 attracted people’s attention, with anxiety over possible radiation hazards. Immediate and long-term concerns are around protection from external and internal exposure by the liberated radionuclides. In particular, residents living in the affected regions are most concerned about ingesting contaminated foodstuffs, including drinking water. Efficient removal of radionuclides from rainwater and drinking water has been reported using several pot-type filtration devices. A currently used flow-type test apparatus is expected to simultaneously provide radionuclide elimination prior to ingestion and protection from internal exposure by accidental ingestion of radionuclides through the use of a micro-carbon carboxymethyl cartridge unit and an electrochemically reduced water production unit, respectively. However, the removability of radionuclides from contaminated tap water has not been tested to date. Thus, the current research was undertaken to assess the capability of the apparatus to remove radionuclides from artificially contaminated tap water. The results presented here demonstrate that the apparatus can reduce radioactivity levels to below the detection limit in applied tap water containing either 300 Bq/kg of 137Cs or 150 Bq/kg of 125I. The apparatus had a removal efficiency of over 90% for all concentration ranges of radio–cesium and –iodine tested. The results showing efficient radionuclide removability, together with previous studies on molecular hydrogen and platinum nanoparticles as reactive oxygen species scavengers, strongly suggest that the test apparatus has the potential to offer maximum safety against radionuclide-contaminated foodstuffs, including drinking water.

Highlights

  • The Great East Japan Earthquake of magnitude 9 struck the northeastern coast of Japan on March 11, 2011

  • Tap water distributed by the Fukuoka City Waterworks Bureau, Fukuoka, Japan was used in all experiments except ultrapure water (Milli Q water, Merck Millipore, Tokyo, Japan) for the preparation of standard solutions for inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis

  • 131I can enter the body through inhalation and by ingesting contaminated foodstuffs including drinking water, which rapidly concentrates in the thyroid gland, where b-radiation exposure takes place

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Summary

Introduction

The Great East Japan Earthquake of magnitude 9 struck the northeastern coast of Japan on March 11, 2011. The earthquake caused a catastrophic tsunami, with the wave height of nearly 40.5 m, which caused failures in the nuclear reactor cooling system in the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (FDNPP) [1,2]. Soon after, these failures triggered hydrogen explosions in the nuclear reactors, discharging radioactive steam and liberating various radionuclides into the air over several days [2,3]. A layered chalcogenide with a CdI2 crystal structure for adsorbing several cations has been explored [26]

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