Search
 
Home| Join Our Mailing List| New Reviews| New Titles
Editor's Choice| Bestsellers| Textbooks| Book Series| Study Guides| E-Catalogues
  CHEMISTRY
  Analytical Chemistry
Biochemistry
Computational Chemistry
Environmental/ Atmospheric
Chemistry

General
Inorganic Chemistry
Organic Chemistry
Physical Chemistry
New Titles
December Bestsellers
Editor's Choice
Nobel Lectures in Chemistry
Textbooks
Recent Reviews
Book Series
Related Journals
  • Surface Review and Letters (SRL)
  • Journal of Theoretical and Computational Chemistry (JTCC)
  • Chemistry Journals
  • NANO
  • Request for related catalogues
     
      PRODUCTS
      Journals
    eBooks
    Journals Archives
    eProceedings
     
      RESOURCES
      Print flyer
  • Full Version
  • Condensed Version
  • Recommend title
    For Librarians
    For Authors
    For Booksellers
    For Translation Rights About Us
    Contact Us
    How to Order News
     
    Bookmark and Share

    BIOSPHERE IMPLICATIONS OF DEEP DISPOSAL OF NUCLEAR WASTE
    The Upwards Migration of Radionuclides in Vegetated Soils

    by H S Wheater (Imperial College London, UK), J N B Bell (Imperial College London, UK), A P Butler (Imperial College London, UK), B M Jackson (Imperial College London, UK), L Ciciani (Imperial College London, UK), D J Ashworth (Imperial College London, UK & US Salinity Laboratory, California, Riverside, USA), & G G Shaw (Imperial College London, UK & University of Nottingham, UK)

    Table of Contents (58k)
    Preface (88k)
    Chapter 1: Introduction (106k)

    The safety assessment of a deep repository for nuclear waste poses challenging scientific and technical questions. The risks from leakage of radionuclides from the repository, including transfers to the biosphere and the food chain must be assessed. This involves complex and poorly understood interactions between groundwater, soils, plants and the atmosphere. A unique, multidisciplinary experimental and modeling program at Imperial College London has been funded by UK NIREX to develop the science and to produce modeling tools to interpret and generalize the experimental data for safety assessment. This monograph brings together for the first time the accumulated results and experience from almost two decades of research. The results have important implications for the safety assessment of nuclear waste worldwide and provide new insights into the geochemical and biological controls on the upwards migration of radiochemicals in the near-surface environment.

     
    Contents:
    • Methods:
      • Experimental Protocols
      • Modelling Radionuclide Transport and Uptake in Vegetated Soils
    • Results:
      • Radiochlorine
      • Radioiodine
      • Technetium
      • Radioselenium
      • Radiocations
    • Conclusions and Recommendations
     
    Readership: Professionals/academics/postgraduates of nuclear waste management industry, environmental science, soil science, environmental risk assessment, pollution and hydrology.
     
     
    420pp    Pub. date: Jul 2007  
    ISBN:   978-1-86094-743-8
    1-86094-743-3
       US$165 / £109

     


    420pp    Pub. date: Jul 2007  
    ISBN:   978-1-86094-948-7(ebook)
    1-86094-948-7(ebook)
       US$215

     


     

    Imperial College Press  |  Global Publishing  |  Asia-Pacific Biotech News  |  Innovation Magazine
    Labcreations Co  |  Meeting Matters  |  National Academies Press

    Copyright © 2012 World Scientific Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
    Updated on 13 February 2012