Browsing by Author "Liu, HY"
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- ItemCapture of radioactive cesium and iodide Ions from water by using titanate nanofibers and nanotubes(Wiley-Blackwell, 2011-01-01) Yang, D; Sarina, S; Zhu, HW; Liu, HY; Zheng, Z; Xie, M; Smith, SV; Komarneni, SRadioactive Cs+ and I− ions are the products of uranium fission, and can be easily dissolved in water during an accident at a nuclear reactor, such as those that occurred at Chernobyl in 1986, at Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania in 1979, and in 2011 at Fukushima, Japan. In 2009, leaks of radioactive materials such as 137Cs and 131I isotopes also occurred during minor accidents at nuclear power stations in Britain, Germany, and the U.S. These leaks have raised concerns about exposure levels in the nearby communities because it is feared that these fission products could make their way into the food chain when present in waste water. Radioactive iodine is also used in the treatment of thyroid cancer, and, as a result, radioactive wastewater is discharged by a large number of medical research institutions.1 The wide use of radioisotopes requires effective methods to manage radioactive waste, and methods currently used are complex and extremely costly.2 Herein we demonstrate a potentially cost-effective method to remediate 137Cs+ and 131I− ions from contaminated water by using the unique chemistry of titanate nanotubes and nanofibers, which can not only chemisorb these ions but efficiently trap them for safe disposal. © 2011, Wiley-Blackwell.
- ItemEvaluate transport processes in MERRA driven chemical transport models using updated 222Rn emission inventories and global observations(AGU, 2015-12-14) Zhang, B; Liu, HY; Crawford, J; Fairlie, TD; Chen, G; Chambers, SD; Kang, CH; Williams, AG; Zhang, K; Considine, DB; Sulprizio, MP; Yantosca, RMConvective and synoptic processes play a major role in determining the transport and distribution of trace gases and aerosols in the troposphere. The representation of these processes in global models (at ~100-1000 km horizontal resolution) is challenging, because convection is a sub-grid process and needs to be parameterized, while synoptic processes are close to the grid scale. Depending on the parameterization schemes used in climate models, the role of convection in transporting trace gases and aerosols may vary from model to model. 222Rn is a chemically inert and radioactive gas constantly emitted from soil and has a half-life (3.8 days) comparable to synoptic timescale, which makes it an effective tracer for convective and synoptic transport. In this study, we evaluate the convective and synoptic transport in two chemical transport models (GMI and GEOS-Chem), both driven by the NASA’s MERRA reanalysis. Considering the uncertainties in 222Rn emissions, we incorporate two more recent scenarios with regionally varying 222Rn emissions into GEOS-Chem/MERRA and compare the simulation results with those using the relatively uniform 222Rn emissions in the standard model. We evaluate the global distribution and seasonality of 222Rn concentrations simulated by the two models against an extended collection of 222Rn observations from 1970s to 2010s. The intercomparison will improve our understanding of the spatial variability in global 222Rn emissions, including the suspected excessive 222Rn emissions in East Asia, and provide useful feedbacks on 222Rn emission models. We will assess 222Rn vertical distributions at different latitudes in the models using observations at surface sites and in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere. Results will be compared with previous models driven by other meteorological fields (e.g., fvGCM and GEOS4). Since the decay of 222Rn is the source of 210Pb, a useful radionuclide tracer attached to submicron aerosols, improved understanding of emissions and transport of 222Rn will provide insights into the transport, distribution, and wet deposition of 210Pb aerosols.
- ItemSimulation of radon-222 with the GEOS-Chem global model: emissions, seasonality, and convective transport(Copernicus Publications, 2021-02-10) Zhang, B; Liu, HY; Crawford, JH; Chen, G; Fairlie, TD; Chambers, SD; Kang, CH; Williams, AG; Zhang, K; Considine, DB; Sulprizio, MP; Yantosca, RMRadon-222 (222Rn) is a short-lived radioactive gas naturally emitted from land surfaces and has long been used to assess convective transport in atmospheric models. In this study, we simulate 222Rn using the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to improve our understanding of 222Rn emissions and surface concentration seasonality and characterize convective transport associated with two Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) meteorological products, the Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA) and GEOS Forward Processing (GEOS-FP). We evaluate four global 222Rn emission scenarios by comparing model results with observations at 51 surface sites. The default emission scenario in GEOS-Chem yields a moderate agreement with surface observations globally (68.9 % of data within a factor of 2) and a large underestimate of winter surface 222Rn concentrations at Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes and high latitudes due to an oversimplified formulation of 222Rn emission fluxes (1 atom cm−2 s−1 over land with a reduction by a factor of 3 under freezing conditions). We compose a new global 222Rn emission scenario based on Zhang et al. (2011) and demonstrate its potential to improve simulated surface 222Rn concentrations and seasonality. The regional components of this scenario include spatially and temporally varying emission fluxes derived from previous measurements of soil radium content and soil exhalation models, which are key factors in determining 222Rn emission flux rates. However, large model underestimates of surface 222Rn concentrations still exist in Asia, suggesting unusually high regional 222Rn emissions. We therefore propose a conservative upscaling factor of 1.2 for 222Rn emission fluxes in China, which was also constrained by observed deposition fluxes of 210Pb (a progeny of 222Rn). With this modification, the model shows better agreement with observations in Europe and North America (> 80 % of data within a factor of 2) and reasonable agreement in Asia (close to 70 %). Further constraints on 222Rn emissions would require additional concentration and emission flux observations in the central United States, Canada, Africa, and Asia. We also compare and assess convective transport in model simulations driven by MERRA and GEOS-FP using observed 222Rn vertical profiles in northern midlatitude summer and from three short-term airborne campaigns. While simulations with both GEOS products are able to capture the observed vertical gradient of 222Rn concentrations in the lower troposphere (0–4 km), neither correctly represents the level of convective detrainment, resulting in biases in the middle and upper troposphere. Compared with GEOS-FP, MERRA leads to stronger convective transport of 222Rn, which is partially compensated for by its weaker large-scale vertical advection, resulting in similar global vertical distributions of 222Rn concentrations between the two simulations. This has important implications for using chemical transport models to interpret the transport of other trace species when these GEOS products are used as driving meteorology. © Author(s) 2021.