Assessment of Natural Radioactivity and Associated Dose Rates in Surface Soils around Oluwa Glass Industry Environments, Igbokoda, Ondo State, Southwestern Nigeria
O. Ajanaku
Department of Physical Sciences, Ondo State University of Science and Technology, Okitipupa, Nigeria.
A. O. Ilori *
Department of Physical Sciences, Ondo State University of Science and Technology, Okitipupa, Nigeria.
G. A. Ibitola
Department of Physical Sciences, Ondo State University of Science and Technology, Okitipupa, Nigeria.
O. B. Faturoti
Department of Physical Sciences, Ondo State University of Science and Technology, Okitipupa, Nigeria.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Assessment of natural radioactivity and associated dose rates of surface soils in Oluwa Glass industry environment of Igbokoda, Ondo state, Nigeria was carried out by means of well-calibrated NaI(TI) that was well shielded with a detector coupled to a computer resident quantum MCA2100R multichannel analyzer with an aim to measure the concentrations of 40K,238U and 232Th radionuclides in the soil samples; estimate the absorbed dose rate, annual effective dose and excess lifetime cancer risk in the study area.
The activity concentrations in the soil samples were found to ranged from 153.74 to 228.13 Bq kg-1 with a mean value of 194.69 17.40 Bq kg-1 for 40K, from 9.40 to 14.07 Bq kg-1 with a mean of 11.49 ±2.10 Bq kg-1 for 238U and from 8.42 to 12.08 Bq kg-1 with a mean value of 9.94 ± 1.05 for 232Th respectively. The mean absorbed dose rate was 19.73 ± 18.43 nGyh-1, the annual effective dose was 24.20 ± 8.31 µSvy -1 and the excess lifetime cancer risk was 0.085. The activity concentration of 40K reported in the present study was higher than the value of 58.69 Bq kg-1 for 40K reported for soil samples collected from parts of Sagamu, Southwestern, Nigeria. The mean absorbed dose rate, mean annual effective dose and mean excess lifetime cancer risk reported in this present study were lower than the world average values of 54.00 nGyh-1, 66.00 μSvy-1 and 0.29 respectively. Thus, it can be deduced from our results, that 40K, 238U and 232Th naturally occurring radionuclides, to a very great extent, had already decayed to stable nuclei as at the time of carrying out this research on the chosen site at Igbokoda, Ondo State, Nigeria.
Keywords: Radioactivity, absorbed dose rate, annual effective dose, excess lifetime cancer risk, Igbokoda, Nigeria