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1.
Talanta ; 221: 121638, 2021 Jan 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33076158

RESUMEN

A highly-enriched 233U reference material (>0.99987 n(233U)/n(U)) has been prepared and characterized for use as an isotope dilution mass spectrometry spike. An ion exchange separation was performed on 1 g of high purity 233U to further reduce trace amounts of contaminant Pu in the material. The purified 233U was then prepared as a master solution which was analyzed for molality of uranium by modified Davies and Gray titration. A portion of the master solution was quantitatively diluted and dispensed for reference material units. Selected units were analyzed for verification of uranium amount and to characterize uranium isotope amount ratios by multi-collector inductively couple plasma mass spectrometry. Modelling of spike-corrected isotopic data show that the new spike will enable simultaneous measurements of uranium amount and isotope amount ratios with resulting uncertainties that are substantially less sensitive to over spiking than widely used 233U certified reference materials.

2.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34248241

RESUMEN

A highly-enriched 244Pu isotope dilution reference material has been prepared and characterized for metrologically traceable measurements of very small quantities of plutonium. The amount of plutonium in samples associated with nuclear safeguards and nuclear forensic measurements can be significantly less than 1 ng. Accordingly, the ability to quantify the amount and isotopic composition of plutonium from a single mass-spectrometric analysis is particularly desirable. The highly-enriched 244Pu reference material, described here, will minimize the magnitude of spike corrections necessary to obtain accurate information on plutonium isotopic composition from isotope dilution measurements.

3.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(21): 12238-12246, 2019 Nov 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31589027

RESUMEN

The migration of low levels of plutonium has been observed at the Nevada National Security Site (NNSS) and attributed to colloids. To better understand the mechanism(s) of colloid-facilitated transport at this site, we performed flow cell desorption experiments with mineral colloid suspensions produced by hydrothermal alteration of NNSS nuclear melt glass, residual material left behind from nuclear testing. Three different colloid suspensions were used: (1) colloidal material from hydrothermal alteration of nuclear melt glass at 140 °C; (2) at 200 °C; and (3) plutonium sorbed to SWy-1 montmorillonite at room temperature. The 140 °C sample contained only montmorillonite, while zeolite and other phases were present in the 200 °C sample. Overall, more plutonium was desorbed from the 140 °C colloids (ca. 9-16%) than from the 200 °C colloids (ca. 4-8%). Furthermore, at the end of the 4.5 day flow cell experiments, the desorption rates for the 140 °C colloids and the Pu-montmorillonite colloids were similar while the desorption rates from the 200 °C colloids were up to an order of magnitude lower. We posit that the formation of zeolites and clays hydrothermally altered at 200 °C may lead to a more stable association of plutonium with colloids, resulting in lower desorption rates. This may give rise to more extensive colloid-facilitated transport and help explain why trace levels of plutonium are found downgradient from their original source decades after a nuclear detonation. Interestingly, in the case of cesium (a co-contaminant of plutonium), no difference was observed between the 140 and 200 °C colloids. This reflects intrinsic differences between cesium and plutonium sorption/desorption behavior (charge, cation size) and suggests that the Cs sorption mechanism (cation exchange) is not similarly affected by colloid formation temperature.


Asunto(s)
Plutonio , Bentonita , Coloides , Nevada , Medidas de Seguridad
4.
Anal Chem ; 91(18): 11643-11652, 2019 09 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31418542

RESUMEN

An intercomparison of the radio-chronometric ages of four distinct plutonium-certified reference materials varying in chemical form, isotopic composition, and period of production are presented. The cross-comparison of the different 234U/238Pu, 235U/239Pu, 236U/240Pu, and 241Am/241Pu model purification ages obtained at four independent analytical facilities covering a range of laboratory environments from bulk sample processing to clean facilities dedicated to nuclear forensic investigation of environmental samples enables a true assessment of the state-of-practice in "age dating capabilities" for nuclear materials. The analytical techniques evaluated used modern mass spectrometer instrumentation including thermal ionization mass spectrometers and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometers for isotopic abundance measurements. Both multicollector and single collector instruments were utilized to generate the data presented here. Consensus values established in this study make it possible to use these isotopic standards as quality control standards for radio-chronometry applications. Results highlight the need for plutonium isotopic standards that are certified for 234U/238Pu, 235U/239Pu, 236U/240Pu, and 241Am/241Pu model purification ages as well as other multigenerational radio-chronometers such as 237Np/241Pu. Due to the capabilities of modern analytical instrumentation, analytical laboratories that focus on trace level analyses can obtain model ages with marginally larger uncertainties than laboratories that handle bulk samples. When isotope ratio measurement techniques like thermal ionization mass spectrometry and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry with comparable precision are utilized, model purification ages with similar uncertainties are obtained.

5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32165777

RESUMEN

A 231Pa reference material has been characterized for amount of protactinium. This reference material is primarily intended for calibration of 233Pa tracers produced for 235U-231Pa model age measurements associated with nuclear forensics and nuclear safeguards. Primary measurements for characterization were made by isotope dilution mass spectrometry of a purified 231Pa solution using a 233Pa isotopic spike. The spike was calibrated by allowing multiple aliquots of the 233Pa spike solution to decay to 233U and then measuring the ingrown 233U by isotope dilution mass spectrometry using a certified uranium assay and isotopic standard as a reverse-spike. The new 231Pa reference material will simplify calibration of the 233Pa isotope dilution spikes, provide metrological traceability, and potentially reduce the overall measurement uncertainty of model ages.

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