@article{
  author = {You, Mr. Haoyu; Fan, Mr. Zhongkai; Xie, Miss Ruomei; Yuan, Mrs. Hongzhi; Tan, Dr. Yanliang; },
  title = {A method for measuring the soil radon emanation coefficient without disturbing the soil structure},
  keywords = {Radon emanation coefficient;Undisturbed soil;Radon exhalation rate;Closed-loop monitoring;},
  abstract = {Conventional measurements of the soil radon emanation coefficient often rely on drying, grinding, or repacking, which alters the native pore structure and moisture distribution of the sample. To obtain radon emanation coefficient that is more representative of natural soils, RAD7 was used to conduct closed-loop cumulative measurements on the intact in-situ soil samples. Soil samples without structural alteration were placed in an airtight acrylic accumulation chamber, and the radon concentration in the recirculating gas loop was recorded continuously for 24 h. The radon exhalation rate was determined by nonlinear fitting of the radon concentration variation curve, and the emanation coefficient was then calculated from the exhalation rate, sample dry mass, exposed area, and Ra-226 specific activity. Three natural soil samples were used to validate the method. All samples showed a typical nonlinear accumulation pattern, with rapid early growth followed by slower increase at later times, and the fitted R 2 values ranged from 0.86 to 0.92. The radon exhalation rates were 3.04±0.35, 4.01 ±0.34, and 4.69±0.42 mBq•m -2 •s -1 , corresponding to emanation coefficients of 0.36 ± 0.04, 0.44 ± 0.04, and 0.59 ± 0.05, respectively. In the study, under the same specific activity of Ra-226, due to the differences in water content and porosity, different radon emanation coefficient were obtained. The proposed approach provides a practical basis for obtaining source-term parameters that are closer to actual field conditions for site screening, radon potential assessment, and foundation-soil evaluation.},
  doi = {10.12074/202604.00304},
  url = {https://chinaxiv.org/abs/202604.00304},
  timestamp = {2026-04-30},
}
