Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8081645 Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 2016 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The function of the sampling unit is to pre-enrich xenon by removal of impurities in the gas sample, while the purification unit further purifies, separates impurities and prepares a small-volume sample with relatively high concentration of xenon gas-both stable and radioactive xenon (if present). The quantification unit quantifies the stable xenon which provides information of the gas recovery (yield) of the gas sampling and purification process. In one cycle (7.5 h) XESPM-III can process either two 4 m3 volume samples or two pairs 2 m3 samples each; 24 h maximum throughput is thus twelve 2 m3 samples or six 4 m3 samples; final purified gas sample volume is approx. 7 cm3 (Xe + N2 used as carrier gas); gas recovery (yield) is >70%; radon removal coefficient is 10−6; cross contamination between subsequent samples is <1%; Its flexible design, that does not include a spectrometry system, allows it to be used with various spectrometric systems (HPGe, beta-gamma coincidence) for the final measurement of the radioactive xenon concentrations in the sample. During the field deployment of the XESPM-III in IFE14 it was able to measure 133Xe in the range of 0.18-0.54 Bq/m3 in spiked subsoil gas.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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