Assessment of radiological impact of phosphate fertilization on arable land

Joint Authors

Muhammad, Sayf al-Din Yasin
Sam, Adam Khatir

Source

Sudan Journal of Basic Sciences. |n Series : Chemistry

Issue

Vol. 3, Issue 7 (31 Mar. 2005), pp.133-152, 20 p.

Publisher

Sudan Institute for Natural Sciences Publication Unit

Publication Date

2005-03-31

Country of Publication

Sudan

No. of Pages

20

Main Subjects

Chemistry

Topics

Abstract EN

In an attempt to assess the radiological impact of phosphate fertilization on natural radioactivity of arable land, a sizable number of farm soils fertilized with different rates of fertilization were collected from agricultural projects which supply Khartoum State with vegetables (Umdoam, Aselait and Genaid) as well as unfertilized soils from areas adjacent to the Nile.

The activity concentration of 226Ra, 232Th and 40 K in these agricultural soils has been measured using a high- resolution gamma spectrometry equippe.

With HPGe detector with relative efficiency 50 %.

Over all, the activity concentrations encountered in both fertilized and unfertilized farm soils are characteristic of normal background radiation areas.

Upon comparing the activity levels met in fertilized soils categorically location-wise, the intensity of fertilization was evident as Umdoam soils which are fertilized at a rate of 200 kg / feddan displayed higher values relative to those from Aselait and Genaid where the rate of fertilization amounts to 25 and 75 kg / feddan, respectively.

However, upon comparing the activity levels found in fertilized soils and unfertilized soils collected from and prone to annual flood, it was apparent that unfertilized soils which were rich in silt exhibit higher activity concentrations for 26Ra, 232Th and 40 K.

This led us to conclude that the impact of fertilization rate on enhancing soil radioactivity is negligible for the time being, however, on the long term it will have impact through accumulation of radionuclides contained in phosphate fertilizer.

The corresponding absorbed radiation dose in air 1 m height above the ground level as estimated from the activity concentrations of 22eRa 232Th and 40 K using DRCF's ranged from 39 ± 8 to 46 ± 6 nGy / h f0r fertilized soils and from 46 ± 10 to 63 ± 11 nGy / h for unfertilized soils, These values fall within world-wide range for normal background areas.

The major contribution to the exposure came from 40 i {followed by 226Ra.

They were converted to annual effective dose taking into account the environmental occupancy factor.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Muhammad, Sayf al-Din Yasin& Sam, Adam Khatir. 2005. Assessment of radiological impact of phosphate fertilization on arable land. Sudan Journal of Basic Sciences. |n Series : Chemistry،Vol. 3, no. 7, pp.133-152.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-294208

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Muhammad, Sayf al-Din Yasin& Sam, Adam Khatir. Assessment of radiological impact of phosphate fertilization on arable land. Sudan Journal of Basic Sciences. |n Series : Chemistry Vol. 3, no. 7 (Mar. 2005), pp.133-152.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-294208

American Medical Association (AMA)

Muhammad, Sayf al-Din Yasin& Sam, Adam Khatir. Assessment of radiological impact of phosphate fertilization on arable land. Sudan Journal of Basic Sciences. |n Series : Chemistry. 2005. Vol. 3, no. 7, pp.133-152.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-294208

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references : p. 149-151

Record ID

BIM-294208