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1.
A simple and portable apparatus was developed for measurements of85Kr and133Xe that would be released into the atmosphere in an emergency situation of nuclear facilities. The method is based on cryogenic adsorption of these gases on charcoal followed by chromatographic separation from other gases. The85Kr and133Xe recovered from atmospheric air are determined separately by liquid scintillation counting. It takes about 1 hour for the stepwise determination of85Kr and133Xe. The atmospheric concentration of 3·10–3 Ci per m3 air (1.1·102 Bq/m3 air) is measurable for both nuclides with 20% counting error.  相似文献   

2.
Because of their unique chemical and physical properties, long-lived rare krypton radioisotopes, 85Kr and 81Kr, are ideal tracers for environmental samples, including air, groundwater and ice. Atom trap trace analysis (ATTA) is a new laser-based method for counting both 85Kr and 81Kr atoms with the abundance as low as 10-14 with micro-liters (STP) krypton gas. The entire system for rare radio-krypton measurement built at Hefei is presented, including the atom trap trace analysis instrument and sampling apparatus of gas extraction from water and krypton purification. Atmospheric85Kr concentrations at different places in China were measured, showing a range of 1.3-1.6 Bq/m3, consistent with the northern hemispheric baseline. As a demonstration of the system, some shallow and deep groundwater samples in north and south China were sampled and dated.  相似文献   

3.
A gas sampler with lead shield has been designed for transferring the grab gas sample taken from the sampling station of Taiwan nuclear power reactor. The methods involving gas chromatography and gamma spectrometry have been developed for the determination of fission gases. A gas chromatograph equipped with TCD was used for measurement of gas composition. Column requirements are identified and optimum operating conditions are discussed. A single analysis is completed within 25 minutes for all of the gas constitutents and 12 minutes for only Xe and Kr. The detection limit is 0.005 mm partial pressure for Kr and Xe and a precision of ±1% relative is achieved for all the sample constituents. Combined error determinations for the method denote an attainable accuracy of less than ±2% for constituents at a sample pressure above 10 mm. Mixing and dispensing of the radioactive gases were carried out in a special gas mixing line. In experiment, calibration factors for measurement of133Xe and85Kr in ampules are determined in an isotope calibrator and by Ge(Li) gamma ray spectrometry. The relative precisions of 0.14% and 0.5% are readily achieved for85Kr and133Xe, respectively. The calibration uncertainty in85Kr measurement is 0.4%.  相似文献   

4.
A beta-gamma coincidence counting system has been developed for automated analysis of Xe gas samples separated from air. The Xe gas samples are contained in a cylindrical plastic scintillator cell located between two NaI(T1) scintillation detectors. The X-ray and gamma spectra gated by coincident events in the plastic scintillator cell are recorded for each NaI(T1) crystal. The characteristic signatures of the131mXe,133gXe,133mXe, and135gXe isotopes of interest for nuclear test-ban verification as well as the procedures and results of absolute efficiency measurements are described. A NaI(T1) crystal with provision for 4 sample cells has been implemented for the system to be deployed in the field. Examples of data on ambient air samples in New York City obtained with the field prototype are presented.  相似文献   

5.
Quantification of low-activity noble gases in air is typically accomplished through separation of the noble gas from air followed by radiometric assay. This work is aimed at quantification of radioactive noble gas in air without extraction. A high pressure aluminum Marinelli counting vessel was designed and fabricated that can be placed on a coaxial high purity germanium detector for gamma counting. Characterization of the performance of this Marinelli using MCNP modeling, large excesses of activity, and low-activity noble gas in air is discussed. Minimum detectable concentrations achieved during a 24 h count are: 5, 10, 50, and 1 Bq/m3 for 133Xe, 133mXe, 131mXe, and 135Xe, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
In this work, a Monte Carlo (MC) simulation model is established to accurately characterize a phoswich beta-gamma coincidence detector system. This model can be easily used to predict the beta-gamma coincidence efficiencies of xenon radioisotopes at various stable xenon concentrations in the counting cell. The results demonstrate that there is a significant inverse correlation between beta-gamma coincidence efficiency and stable xenon concentration. The influence of stable xenon concentration on beta-gamma coincidence counting efficiency has been investigated for each individual xenon radioisotope. The results indicate that the effect of stable xenon concentration on beta-gamma coincidence efficiency depends on the xenon radioisotope and its decay modes. The coincidence efficiency of 133Xe with 31.0-keV X-ray decay mode is the most affected one; and then followed by 131mXe, 133Xe with 81.0-keV gamma-ray decay mode, 133mXe and finally 135Xe. The study also indicates that the gamma absorption by xenon gas plays more of a role in the decrease of beta-gamma coincidence efficiency for 133Xe and 135Xe, and that the conversion electron spectrum shifting and broadening plays more of a role in the reduction of beta-gamma coincidence efficiency for the metastable radioxenon of 131mXe and 133mXe.  相似文献   

7.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, with guidance and support from the U.S. Department of Energy's NN-20 Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) Research and Development program, has developed and demonstrated a fully automatic sampler-analyzer (ARSA) for the collection and quantitative measurement of the four xenon radionuclides,131mXe (11.9 d),133mXe (2.19 d),133Xe (5.24 d), and135Xe (9.10 h), in the atmosphere. These radionuclides are important signatures in monitoring for compliance to a CTBT, and may have applications in stack monitoring and other areas where xenon radionuclides are present. The activity ratios between certain of these radionuclides permit discrimination between radioxenon originating from nuclear detonations and that from nuclear reactor operations, nuclear fuel reprocessing, or from medical isotope production and usage. With the ARSA system, xenon is continuously and automatically separated from the atmosphere at flow rates of about 100 lpm by sorption-bed techniques. Samples collected in 8 hours are automatically analyzed by electron-photon coincidence spectrometry to provide detection sensitivities as low as 100 μBq/m3 of air. This sensitivity is about 10-fold better than achieved with reported laboratory-based procedures1 for the short time collection intervals of interest. Gamma-ray energy spectra and gas analysis data are automatically collected.  相似文献   

8.
A fully automatic radioxenon sampler/analyzer (ARSA) has been developed and demonstrated for the collection and quantitative measurement of the four xenon radionuclides,131mXe(11.9 d),133mXe(2.2 d),133Xe(5.2 d), and135Xe(9.1 hr), in the atmosphere. These radionuclides are important signatures in monitoring for compliance to a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). Activity ratios of these radionuclides permit source attribution. Xenon, continuously and automatically separated from the atmosphere, is automatically analyzed by electron-photon coincidence spectrometry providing a lower limit of detection of about 100 μBq/m3. The demonstrated detection limit is about 100 times better than achievable with reported laboratory-based procedures for the short-time collection intervals of interest.  相似文献   

9.
The International Monitoring System for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty will include measurements of Xe fission products. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has developed an automated system for separating Xe from air which detects Xe fission products using a beta-gamma counting system for 131mXe, 133mXe, 133gXe, and 135gXe. Betas and conversion electrons are detected in a plastic scintillation cell containing the Xe sample. Gamma and X-rays are detected in a NaI(Tl) scintillation detector which surrounds the plastic scintillator sample cell. Two-dimensional pulse-height spectra of gamma-energy versus beta-energy are obtained. The plastic scintillator spectrum in coincidence with the 31-keV X-rays from 131mXe. 133mXe, and 133gXe is a complex mixture of conversion electrons and betas. A new technique to simultaneously measure the delayed coincidence (T 1/2 = 6.27 ns) between beta-particles from 133gXe and conversion electrons depopulating the 81-keV state in 133 Cs is being developed. This technique allows separation of the 133gXe beta spectrum from the conversion electrons due to 131mXe and 133mXe and uniquely quantifies all three nuclides.  相似文献   

10.
Among the most important, conservative geochemical tracers are the long-lived isotopes of krypton, 81Kr and 85Kr. Following a brief review of the metrology and applications of these radionuclides, we focus on the low-level measurement of the 10.8 year fission product 85Kr, in connection with its use for studying atmospheric transport and short term (decadal) atmosphere-ocean exchange and mixing. Special challenges for the study of 85Kr in the environment are: (1) reducing detection/quantification limits to mBq levels, to minimize the need for costly (large) atmospheric and marine samples, where current levels are ca. 1.4 Bq·m-3 (northern troposphere) and 0.08 mBq·kg-1 (surface ocean water); and (2) designing a protocol that accounts for the influence of both instrumental and environmental backgrounds and their variability. The capability of the NIST enhanced low-level gas counting system to meet these challenges was demonstrated theoretically and experimentally, showing that ambient 85Kr can be quantified in just 1.5 l air or 25 l seawater with 2000 min paired counting periods.  相似文献   

11.
The differential pulse-height distributions for241Am,131mXe,14C and3H are investigated as a function of temperature. The spectra are shifted toward higher pulseheights with decreasing temperature. During the measurement, the temperature of photomultipliers of liquid scintillation system are kept at 8.8 °C. The counting efficiency of14C and3H increases with decreasing temperature. The mechanism involved in this effect is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Noble gas stable isotope abundance measurements may provide a tool for detecting reprocessing activities of nuclear fuels. An approach has been made by carrying out blending calculations of released fission xenon and krypton in air using the Isotope Mixture Programs which have been developed at the IRMM. After having obtained a reliable approximation to the expected range of the isotope ratios in the blends and the respective detection limit thereof through these calculations, the potential application of ultra-accurate measurements of the isotopic composition of anthropogenic and atmospheric noble gases is taken into consideration. Also the important role of radiometric measurements of 85Kr and 133Xe for the detection of nuclear fuel reprocessing is taken into account. The information provided by such activity measurements is limited, therefore a method to calculate the initial isotopic composition of released fission noble gases, through measuring of their atmospheric mixing ratio, is presented and discussed. Highly accurate stable isotopic measurements of atmospheric noble gases might provide more detailed information on the “history” of the reprocessed nuclear fuel. Therefore they could serve, in combination with radiometric detection techniques, as an excellent tool for the identification of reprocessing activities.  相似文献   

13.
The separation of xenon/krypton (Xe/Kr) mixture is of great importance to industry, but the available porous materials allow the adsorption of both, Xe and Kr only with limited selectivity. Herein we report an anion‐pillared ultramicroporous material NbOFFIVE‐2‐Cu‐i (ZU‐62) with finely tuned pore aperture size and structure flexibility, which for the first time enables an inverse size‐sieving effect in separation along with record Xe/Kr selectivity and ultrahigh Xe capacity. Evidenced by single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction, the rotation of anions and pyridine rings upon contact of larger‐size Xe atoms adapts cavities to the shape/size of Xe and allows strong host‐Xe interaction, while the smaller‐size Kr is excluded. Breakthrough experiments confirmed that ZU‐62 has a real practical potential for producing high‐purity Kr and Xe from air‐separation byproducts, showing record Kr productivity (206 mL g?1) and Xe productivity (42 mL g?1, in desorption) as well as good recyclability.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Hydrogen-bonded organic frameworks (HOFs) have been emerging as a new type of very promising microporous materials for gas separation and purification, but few HOFs structures constructed through hydrogen-bonding tetramers have been explored in this field. Herein, we report the first microporous HOF (termed as HOF-FJU-46) afforded by hydrogen-bonding tetramers with 4-fold interpenetrated diamond networks, which shows excellent chemical and thermal stability. What's more, activated HOF-FJU-46 exhibits the highest xenon (Xe) uptake of 2.51 mmol g−1 and xenon/krypton (Kr) selectivity of 19.9 at the ambient condition among the reported HOFs up to date. Dynamic breakthrough tests confirmed the excellent Xe/Kr separation of HOF-FJU-46a, showing high Kr productivity (110 mL g−1) and Xe uptake (1.29 mmol g−1), as well as good recyclability. The single crystal X-ray diffraction and the molecular simulations revealed that the abundant accessible aromatic and pyrazole rings in the pore channels of HOF-FJU-46a can provide the multiple strong C−H⋅⋅⋅Xe interactions with Xe atoms.  相似文献   

16.
The verification regime of the comprehensive test ban treaty (CTBT) is based on a network of three different waveform technologies together with global monitoring of aerosols and noble gas in order to detect, locate and identify a nuclear weapon explosion down to 1 kt TNT equivalent. In case of a low intensity underground or underwater nuclear explosion, it appears that only radioactive gases, especially the noble gas which are difficult to contain, will allow identification of weak yield nuclear tests. Four radioactive xenon isotopes, 131mXe, 133mXe, 133Xe and 135Xe, are sufficiently produced in fission reactions and exhibit suitable half-lives and radiation emissions to be detected in atmosphere at low level far away from the release site. Four different monitoring CTBT systems, ARIX, ARSA, SAUNA, and SPALAX? have been developed in order to sample and to measure them with high sensitivity. The latest developed by the French Atomic Energy Commission (CEA) is likely to be drastically improved in detection sensitivity (especially for the metastable isotopes) through a higher sampling rate, when equipped with a new conversion electron (CE)/X-ray coincidence spectrometer. This new spectrometer is based on two combined detectors, both exhibiting very low radioactive background: a well-type NaI(Tl) detector for photon detection surrounding a gas cell equipped with two large passivated implanted planar silicon chips for electron detection. It is characterized by a low electron energy threshold and a much better energy resolution for the CE than those usually measured with the existing CTBT equipments. Furthermore, the compact geometry of the spectrometer provides high efficiency for X-ray and for CE associated to the decay modes of the four relevant radioxenons. The paper focus on the design of this new spectrometer and presents spectroscopic performances of a prototype based on recent results achieved from both radioactive xenon standards and air sample measurements. Major improvements in detection sensitivity have been reached and quantified, especially for metastable radioactive isotopes 131mXe and 133mXe with a gain in minimum detectable activity (about 2 × 10?3 Bq) relative to current CTBT SPALAX? system (air sampling frequency normalized to 8 h) of about 70 and 30 respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Photoinjection measurements show that in liquid and gaseous krypton and xenon V0 is negative. V0 has a minimum (?0.77 eV for Xe and ?0.53 eV for Kr) near the density of the mobility maximum, becoming zero at densities of the order of 1020 atoms/cm3.  相似文献   

18.
Hybrid hydrogen-bonded (H-bonded) frameworks built from charged components or metallotectons offer diverse guest-framework interactions for target-specific separations. We present here a study to systematically explore the coordination chemistry of monovalent halide anions, i.e., F, Cl, Br, and I, with the aim to develop hybrid H-bond synthons that enable the controllable construction of microporous H-bonded frameworks exhibiting fine-tunable surface polarity within the adaptive cavities for realistic xenon/krypton (Xe/Kr) separation. The spherical halide anions, especially Cl, Br, and I, are found to readily participate in the charge-assisted H-bonding assembly with well-defined coordination behaviors, resulting in robust frameworks bearing open halide anions within the distinctive 1D pore channels. The activated frameworks show preferential binding towards Xe (IAST Xe/Kr selectivity ca. 10.5) because of the enhanced polarizability and the pore confinement effect. Specifically, dynamic column Xe/Kr separation with a record-high separation factor (SF=7.0) among H-bonded frameworks was achieved, facilitating an efficient Xe/Kr separation in dilute, CO2-containing gas streams exactly mimicking the off-gas of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) reprocessing.  相似文献   

19.
The combination of matrix isolation infrared spectroscopic and quantum chemical calculation results provide strong evidence that scandium and yttrium monoxide cations, ScO+ and YO+, coordinate multiple noble gas atoms in forming noble gas complexes. The results showed that ScO+ coordinates five Ar, Kr, or Xe atoms, and YO+ coordinates six Ar or Kr and five Xe atoms in solid noble gas matrixes. Hence, the ScO+ and YO+ cations trapped in solid noble gas matrixes should be regarded as the [ScO(Ng)5]+ (Ng = Ar, Kr, or Xe), [YO(Ng)6]+ (Ng = Ar or Kr) or [YO(Xe)5]+ complexes. Experiments with dilute krypton or xenon in argon or krypton in xenon produced new IR bands, which are due to the stepwise formation of the [ScO(Ar)(5-n)(Kr)n]+, [ScO(Kr)(5-n)(Xe)n]+ (n = 1-5), [YO(Ar)(6-n)(Kr)n]+ (n = 1-6), and [YO(Ar)(6-n)(Xe)n]+ (n = 1-4) complexes.  相似文献   

20.
The separation of xenon/krypton (Xe/Kr) mixture is of great importance to industry, but the available porous materials allow the adsorption of both, Xe and Kr only with limited selectivity. Herein we report an anion-pillared ultramicroporous material NbOFFIVE-2-Cu-i (ZU-62) with finely tuned pore aperture size and structure flexibility, which for the first time enables an inverse size-sieving effect in separation along with record Xe/Kr selectivity and ultrahigh Xe capacity. Evidenced by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, the rotation of anions and pyridine rings upon contact of larger-size Xe atoms adapts cavities to the shape/size of Xe and allows strong host-Xe interaction, while the smaller-size Kr is excluded. Breakthrough experiments confirmed that ZU-62 has a real practical potential for producing high-purity Kr and Xe from air-separation byproducts, showing record Kr productivity (206 mL g−1) and Xe productivity (42 mL g−1, in desorption) as well as good recyclability.  相似文献   

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