Algae Could Be The Key to Cleaning Up Nuclear Accident Sites
Posted on Sunday, April 03, 2011 by Unknown
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| C. moniliferum, Crystallizing StrontiumMinna R. Krejci et al. via CHEMSUSCHEM |
Strontium-90 is particularly hazardous because of its similarity to calcium. Because the two atoms share similar atomic properties, radioactive strontium can end up getting into the same places calcium can, like milk, bones, bone marrow, and blood. But strontium-90 isn’t a dominant element in reactor waste--there is usually billions of times more harmless calcium than strontium in a nuclear spill--so being able to separate the two is critical for quick and efficient cleanup.
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| C. moniliferum |
That saves both time and money, and in the midst of a massive disaster cleanup effort like the ongoing one in Japan, both time and money are extremely valuable. For their part, the algae waste little of either--they are easy to culture and begin to precipitate crystals of strontium within a half hour of contact. Strafe a stricken nuclear site with the tiny organisms, and you could have them hunting and sequestering strontium in a matter of minutes.
Source: Popsci via Nature
Labels:
Biology,
Information,
Nuclear Accident,
Nuclear Radiation,
Nuclear Waste,
Physics,
Radiation
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