Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1239584 Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Uranium at the fg level was detectable and the uranium distribution in single hair shafts was derived.•The uranium is located peripherally on the shafts in what seems to be a layer of approximately 10-15 μm thickness.•Uranium bearing particles were found on hairs that had not been washed.

In the present study the distribution of uranium in single human hair shafts has been evaluated using two synchrotron radiation (SR) based micro X-ray fluorescence techniques; SR μ-XRF and confocal SR μ-XRF. The hair shafts originated from persons that have been exposed to elevated uranium concentrations. Two different groups have been studied, i) workers at a nuclear fuel fabrication factory, exposed mainly by inhalation and ii) owners of drilled bedrock wells exposed by ingestion of water. The measurements were carried out on the FLUO beamline at the synchrotron radiation facility ANKA, Karlsruhe. The experiment was optimized to detect U with a beam size of 6.8 μm × 3 μm beam focus allowing detection down to ppb levels of U in 10 s (SR μ-XRF setup) and 70 s (SR confocal μ-XRF setup) measurements. It was found that the uranium was present in a 10–15 μm peripheral layer of the hair shafts for both groups studied. Furthermore, potential external hair contamination was studied by scanning of unwashed hair shafts from the workers. Sites of very high uranium signal were identified as particles containing uranium. Such particles, were also seen in complementary analyses using variable pressure electron microscope coupled with energy dispersive X-ray analyzer (ESEM–EDX). However, the particles were not visible in washed hair shafts.These findings can further increase the understanding of uranium excretion in hair and its potential use as a biomonitor.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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