Radiological investigation on sediments: A case study of wadi rod elsayalla the southeastern desert of egypt

12Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

The presence of heavy radioactive minerals in the studied granitoids from which the Wadi sediments leads to the study of the exposure to emitted gamma rays from the terrestrial radionuclides, such as238 U,232 Th, and40 K. The geological study revealed that the Wadi sediments derived from the surrounding granitoids, such as syenogranite, alkali feldspar granite, and quartz syenite. The mineral analysis confirmed that the granitoids were enriched with radioactive minerals, such as uranothorite as well as monazite, zircon, yttrocolumbite, and allanite. The mean activity of the238 U,232 Th, and40 K concentrations are 62.2 ± 20.8, 84.2 ± 23.3, and 949.4 ± 172.5 Bq kg−1, respectively, for the investigated Wadi sediments, exceeding the reported limit of 33, 45 and 412 Bq kg−1, respectively. Public exposure to emitted gamma radiation is detected by estimating many radiological hazard indices, such as the radium equivalent content (Raeq), external and internal hazard indices (Hex and Hin), annual effective dose (AED), annual gonadal dose equivalent (AGDE), and excess lifetime cancer (ELCR). The obtained results of the radiological hazards parameters showed that public exposure to emitted gamma radiation can induce various dangerous health effects. Thus, the application of the investigated sediments in different building materials and infrastructures fields is not safe. A multivariate statistical analysis (MSA) was applied to detect radionuclide correlations with the radiological hazard parameters estimated in the granite samples.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Abdel Gawad, A. E., Ali, K., Eliwa, H., Sayyed, M. I., Khandaker, M. U., Bradley, D. A., … Hanfi, M. Y. (2021). Radiological investigation on sediments: A case study of wadi rod elsayalla the southeastern desert of egypt. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 11(24). https://doi.org/10.3390/app112411884

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free