ULTRA-TRACE DETERMINATION OF NEPTUNIUM-237 AND PLUTONIUM ISOTOPES IN URINE SAMPLES BY COMPACT ACCELERATOR MASS SPECTROMETRY
Author(s) -
X. Dai,
Marcus Christl,
Sheila Kramer-Tremblay,
HansArno Synal
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
aecl nuclear review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1929-6371
pISSN - 1929-8056
DOI - 10.12943/cnr.2015.00046
Subject(s) - neptunium , accelerator mass spectrometry , plutonium , chemistry , mass spectrometry , actinide , detection limit , isotope , radiochemistry , urine , analytical chemistry (journal) , chromatography , nuclear chemistry , nuclear physics , physics , biochemistry
Ultra-trace analysis of actinides, such as Pu isotopes and 237 Np, in bioassay samples is often needed for radiation protection programs at nuclear facilities. Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS), particularly the compact ETH Zurich system “Tandy”, has evolved over the years as one of the most sensitive, selective, and robust techniques for actinide analysis. Employment of the AMS technique can reduce the demands on sample preparation chemistry and increase sample analysis throughput, due to very low instrumental detection limit, high rejection of interferences, and low susceptibility to adverse sample matrices. Initial research and development tests were performed to explore and demonstrate the analytical capability of AMS for Pu and Np urine bioassay. In this study, urine samples spiked with femtogram levels of Np and Pu isotopes were prepared and measured using compact ETH AMS system and the results showed excellent analytical capability for measuring Np and Pu isotopes at femtogram/litre levels in urine.
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