Chemistry helps reconstruct the origin of 2017 ruthenium plume – Chemical & Engineering News

In the fall of 2017, a cloud of radioactive ruthenium slowly spread across Europe, moving from east to west. Levels of the radioactive element werent high enough to pose a health hazard, but officials were still alarmed. Its taken a long time to piece together what happened, but new evidence published this month suggests the Ru was released after a fire or explosion during processing of spent fuel from a Russian plant.

Reconstructing the path of the radioisotope cloud led French and German radiation protection agencies back to the Mayak reprocessing facility in the Southern Urals in Russia. But Rosatom, Russias nuclear energy corporation, denied these findings. So a group of scientific detectives started trying to crack the case.

But there could have been other explanations for the isotopic ratio. So Steinhauser and PhD student Dorian Zok worked with Thorsten Kleines group at the University of Mnster to supplement their work by looking at the stable isotopes of Ru that were released. They used mass spectrometry to examine Ru caught by Viennese air filters and the fuller isotopic fingerprint confirms that the Ru wasnt from nuclear weapons activity. Comparing the profiles to those of nuclear waste from common reactor types suggests to Steinhauser that the Ru came from spent fuel from a water-water energetic reactor, a type used only in Russia (Nat. Commun. 2020, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-16316-3)

Camille Palmer at Oregon State University cautions that using Ru isotopes as a single indicator of reactor type is challenging, but she says the linkage is plausible and the team did an outstanding job of isolating the Ru and measuring the stable isotopes.

Other work published this week fills in the picture with even more details. Michael Cooke, at Health Canadas Radiation Protection Bureau, offered to help Steinhauser identify the Ru compounds in the filters collected from sites around Europe. About 7% of the sample partitioned into dative solvents like ethanol, so it was clear to Cooke that the filters contained more electron-rich forms of ruthenium. Cooke found a small amount of a 106Ru(III) polychlorinated component and something he thinks is 106RuO2 (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 2020, DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2001914117). These are fingerprints of part of the PUREX processing of nuclear fuel. Processing hot, young fuel probably exacerbated an already exothermic process, causing a fire or explosion and releasing the rogue Ru.

Steinhauser says the detective story has now come to its end. The International Atomic Energy Agency does not have a mandate to conduct an investigation on its own, and no government has assumed responsibility. But even if someone had reported the incident, Cooke says the research demonstrates what nuclear forensics can do with even very small samples.

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Chemistry helps reconstruct the origin of 2017 ruthenium plume - Chemical & Engineering News

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