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Rapid Sample Preparation for Alpha Spectroscopy with Ultrafiltration Membranes.

Christine E DuvalAbenazer W DargeCody RuffTimothy A DeVolScott M Husson
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
This contribution describes a rapid, fieldable alpha spectroscopy sample preparation technique that minimizes consumables and decreases the nuclear forensics timeline. Functional ultrafiltration membranes are presented that selectively concentrate uranium directly from pH 6 groundwater and serve as the alpha spectroscopy substrate. Membranes were prepared by ultraviolet grafting of uranium-selective polymer chains from the membrane surface. Membranes were characterized by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy before and after modification to support functionalization. Membrane performance was evaluated using uranium-233 or depleted uranium in both deionized and simulated groundwater at pH 6. Functionalized membranes achieved peak energy resolutions of 31 ± 2 keV and recoveries of 81 ± 4% when prepared directly from pH 6 simulated groundwater. For simulated groundwater spiked with depleted uranium, baseline energy resolution was achieved for both isotopes (uranium-238 and uranium-234). The porous, uranium-selective substrate designs can process liters per hour of uranium-contaminated groundwater using low-pressure (<150 kPa) filtration and a 45 mm diameter membrane filter, leading to a high-throughput, one-step concentration, purification, and sample mounting process.
Keyphrases
  • drinking water
  • heavy metals
  • health risk
  • human health
  • health risk assessment
  • high throughput
  • high resolution
  • single molecule
  • risk assessment
  • magnetic resonance
  • quantum dots
  • single cell
  • simultaneous determination