RESUMEN
Plutonium, americium, and uranium contribute to the radioactive contamination of the environment and are risk factors for elevated radiation exposure via ingestion through food or water. Due to the significant environmental inventory of these radioelements, a sampling method to accurately monitor their bioavailable concentrations in natural waters is necessary, especially since physicochemical factors can cause significant temporal fluctuations in their waterborne concentrations. To this end, we engineered novel diffusive gradients in thin-film (DGT) configurations using resin gels, which are selective for UO22+, Pu(IV + V), and Am(III) among an excess of extraneous cations. In this work, we also report an improved synthesis of our in-house ion-imprinted polymer resin, which we used to manufacture a resin gel to capture Am(III). The effective diffusion coefficients of Pu, Am, and U in agarose cross-linked polyacrylamide were determined in freshwater and seawater simulants and in natural seawater, to calibrate these configurations for environmental deployments.
Asunto(s)
Plutonio , Uranio , Americio/análisis , Difusión , Agua Dulce , Plutonio/análisis , Uranio/análisisRESUMEN
There is an increasing demand for rapid and effective analytical tools to support nuclear forensic investigations of seized or suspect materials. Some methods are simply adapted from other scientific disciplines and can effectively be used to rapidly prepare complex materials for subsequent analysis. A novel sample fusion method is developed, tested, and validated to produce homogeneous, flux-free glass beads of geochemical reference materials (GRMs), uranium ores, and uranium ore concentrates (UOC) prior to the analysis of 14 rare earth elements (REE) via laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). The novelty of the procedure is the production of glass beads using 9 parts high purity synthetic enstatite (MgSiO3) as the glass former with 1 part of sample (sample mass â¼1.5 mg). The beads are rapidly prepared (â¼10 min overall time) by fusing the blended mixture on an iridium strip resistance heater in an argon-purged chamber. Many elements can be measured in the glass bead, but the rare earth group in particular is a valuable series in nuclear forensic studies and is well-determined using LA-ICP-MS. The REE data obtained from the GRMs, presented as chondrite normalized patterns, are in very good agreement with consensus patterns. The UOCs have comparable patterns to solution ICP-MS methods and published data. The attractions of the current development are its conservation of sample, speed of preparation, and suitability for microbeam analysis, all of which are favorable for nuclear forensics practitioners and geochemists requiring REE patterns from scarce or valuable samples.
Asunto(s)
Ciencias Forenses/métodos , Terapia por Láser , Espectrometría de Masas/métodos , Silicatos de Magnesio , Metales de Tierras Raras , Estándares de Referencia , UranioRESUMEN
The application of Principal Components Analysis (PCA) to U and Th series gamma spectrometry data provides a discriminatory tool to help determine the provenance of illicitly recovered uranium ore concentrates (UOCs). The PCA is applied to a database of radiometric signatures from 19 historic UOCs from Australia, Canada, and the USA representing many uranium geological deposits. In this study a key process to obtain accurate radiometric data (gamma and alpha) is to digest the U-ores and UOCs using a lithium tetraborate fusion. Six UOCs from the same sample set were analysed 'blind' and compared against the database to identify their geolocation. These UOCs were all accurately linked to their correct geolocations which can aid the forensic laboratory in determining which further analytical techniques should be used to improve the confidence of the particular location.