Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8209030 | Applied Radiation and Isotopes | 2016 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Tritium (3H) in natural waters is a powerful tracer of hydrological processes, but its low concentrations require electrolytic enrichment before precise measurements can be made with a liquid scintillation counter. Here, we describe a newly developed, compact tritium enrichment unit which can be used to enrich up to 2 L of a water sample. This allows a high enrichment factor (>100) for measuring low 3H contents of <0.05 TU. The TEU uses a small cell (250 mL) with automated re-filling and a CO2 bubbling technique to neutralize the high alkalinity of enriched samples. The enriched residual sample is retrieved from the cell under vacuum by cryogenic distillation at â20 °C and the tritium enrichment factor for each sample is accurately determined by measuring pre- and post- enrichment 2H concentrations with laser spectrometry.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Radiation
Authors
B. Kumar, L.-F. Han, L.I. Wassenaar, P.M. Klaus, G.G. Kainz, D. Hillegonds, D. Brummer, M. Ahmad, D.L. Belachew, L. Araguás, P. Aggarwal,