γ-Spectroscopy measurement of natural radioactivity and assessment of radiation hazard indices in soil samples from oil fields environment of Delta State, Nigeria
2012
Agbalagba, E.O. | Avwiri, G.O. | Chad-Umoreh, Y.E.
The analysis of naturally occurring radionuclides (²²⁶Ra, ²³²Th and ⁴⁰K) has been carried out in soil samples collected from oil and gas field environment of Delta state, using gamma spectroscopy operated on a Canberra vertical high purity 2″×2″ NaI(TI) detector. The activity concentration of the samples ranges from 19.2 ± 5.6Bqkg⁻¹ to 94.2 ± 7.7Bqkg⁻¹ with mean value of 41.0 ± 5.0Bqkg⁻¹ for ²²⁶Ra, 17.1 ± 3.0Bqkg⁻¹ to 47.5 ± 5.3Bqkg⁻¹ with mean value of 29.7 ± 4Bqkg⁻¹ for ²³²Th and 107.0 ± 10.2Bqkg⁻¹ to 712.4 ± 38.9Bqkg⁻¹ with a mean value of 412.5 ± 20.0Bqkg⁻¹ for ⁴⁰K. These values obtained are well within the world range and values reported elsewhere in other countries, but are little above some countries reported average values and some part of Nigeria. The study also examined some radiation hazard indices, the mean values obtained are, 98.5 ± 12.3Bq.kg⁻¹, 0.8Bqkg⁻¹, 54.6ηGyh⁻¹, 0.07μSvy⁻¹, 0.3 and 0.4 for Radium equivalent activity (Raₑq), Representative level index (Iγ), Absorbed Dose rates (D), Annual Effective Dose Rates (Eff Dose), External Hazard Index (Hₑₓ) and Internal Hazard Index (Hᵢₙ) respectively. These calculated hazard indices to estimate the potential radiological health risk in soil and the dose rate associated with it are well below their permissible limit. The soil and sediments from the study area provide no excessive exposures for inhabitants and can be use as construction materials without posing any immediate radiological threat to the public. However, oil workers in the fields and host communities are cautioned against excess exposure to avoid future accumulative dose of these radiations from sludge and sediment of this area.
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