Award: OCE-1029223

Award Title: Collaborative Research: Development of a Submersible, Autonomous Rn-222 Survey System
Funding Source: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
Program Manager: Kandace S. Binkley

Outcomes Report

This project developed a state-of-the-art system capable of measuring dissolved radon-222 activities under the water. Radon-222 is a naturally-occurring radioactive gas that serves as a useful tracer of groundwater that has recently seeped into ocean waters. Such seepage has been shown to deliver substantial amounts of nutrients, trace metals, and other contaminants into ocean waters and therefore may exert a strong control over nearshore ocean ecosystem health. Prior to this project, our understanding of where such groundwater inputs to ocean waters occur has been limited due to our inability to measure small-scale discharge signals (e.g., radon-222) near the source in open waters of the continental shelf environment. This project aimed to fill this analytical need by developing a system capable of measuring radon-222 activities continuously from a submersible vehicle, which allows the analytical system to measure very near the seabed where the discharges occur. This project was led by researchers at Coastal Carolina University (CCU) and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI). The CCU efforts of the project developed advancements in methods to transfer a dissolved gas like radon into an air phase from which its concentrations could be measured. The WHOI side of the project integrated this degassing system with electrical and physical engineering advancements to construct the entire submersible radon system (named the æRADXÆ). Following completion of the RADX, field trials of the system confirm that it performs at an equivalent analytical capability (including measurement accuracy, resolution, and response time to radon concentration changes) as conventional radon analysis systems, which have heretofore been limited to surface water measurements. Now, the RADX has the ability to descend below the water surface and measure for radon-222 underneath the ocean. With the introduction of the RADX, researchers will be able to better understand how groundwater seepage locations and associated delivery of nutrients may impact oceanic ecosystems (for example, around coral reef settings). Therefore, this tool will be useful to researchers across a broad spectrum of oceanographic disciplines who are interested in delivery of nutrients, trace metals, and chemical contaminants from this unseen pathway. Additionally, a number of undergraduate and graduate students at Coastal Carolina University received valuable research experience by participating in this project to develop a new analytical system. We have presented the need for such an analytical system and the progress of our instrument design at a variety of regional, national, and international conferences. Last Modified: 11/23/2015 Submitted by: Richard N Peterson

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Principal Investigator: Richard N. Peterson (Coastal Carolina University)