Atmosphere (May 2024)

The Design of a Parameterization Scheme for <sup>137</sup>Cs Based on the WRF-Chem Model and Its Application in Simulating the Fukushima Nuclear Accident

  • Qun Long,
  • Zengliang Zang,
  • Xiaoyan Ma,
  • Sheng Fang,
  • Yiwen Hu,
  • Yijie Wang,
  • Shuhan Zhuang,
  • Liang Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos15060646
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. 646

Abstract

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Based on the Weather Research and Forecasting Model Coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem) atmospheric chemistry model, a parameterization scheme for the radioactive isotope caesium (137Cs), considering processes such as advection, turbulent diffusion, dry deposition, and wet deposition, was constructed, enabling the spatial distribution simulation of the concentration and deposition of 137Cs. The experimental simulation studies were carried out during the high emission period of the Fukushima nuclear accident (from 11 to 17 March 2011). Two sets of comparison experiments, with or without deposition, were designed, the effects of wind field and precipitation on the spatial transport and ground deposition of 137Cs were analyzed, and the influence of wind field and precipitation on 137Cs vertical transport was analyzed in detail. The results indicate that the model can accurately simulate the meteorological and 137Cs variables. On 15 March, 137Cs dispersed towards the Kanto Plain in Japan under the influence of northeastern winds. In comparison to the experiment without deposition, the concentration of 137Cs in the Fukushima area decreased by approximately 286 Bq·m−3 in the deposition experiment. Under the influence of updrafts in the non-deposition experiment, a 137Cs cloud spread upward to a maximum height of 6 km, whereas in the deposition experiment, the highest dispersion of the 137Cs cloud only reach a height of 4 km. Affected by the wind field, dry deposition is mainly distributed in Fukushima, the Kanto Plain, and their eastern ocean areas, with a maximum dry deposition of 5004.5 kBq·m−2. Wet deposition is mainly influenced by the wind field and precipitation, distributed in the surrounding areas of Fukushima, with a maximum wet deposition of 725.3 kBq·m−2. The single-station test results from the deposition experiment were better than those for the non-deposition experiment: the percentage deviations of the Tokyo, Chiba, Maebashi, and Naraha stations decreased by 61%, 69%, 46%, and 51%, respectively, and the percentage root mean square error decreased by 46%, 25%, 38%, and 48%, respectively.

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