67
Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene

Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE

Presented byMinnesota Department of HealthPennsylvania Department of Environmental ProtectionU.S. Environmental Protection AgencyWisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene

Page 2: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation & Methods: Laser Phosphorimetry, Uranium

Richard Sheibley

Pennsylvania Dept of Env Protection

Page 3: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Laser Phosphorimeter

UV excitation by pulsed nitrogen laser 337nm

Green luminescence at 494, 516 and 540

Excitation 3-4 X 10-9sec

Page 4: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Laser Phosphorimeter

Measure luminescence when laser is off

Use method of standard addition

Page 5: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation & Methods: Alpha Spectroscopy, Uranium

Lynn West

Wisconsin State Lab of Hygiene

Page 6: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Review of Radioactive Modes of Decay

Properties of Alpha Decay Progeny loses of 4 AMU. Progeny loses 2 nuclear charges Often followed by emission of gamma

226

88Ra 22286

Rn + 42He + energy

Page 7: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Review of Radioactive Modes of Decay, Cont.

Properties of Alpha Decay Alpha particle and

progeny (recoil nucleus) have well-defined energies

spectroscopy based on alpha-particle energies is possible

Energy (MeV)

Cou

nts

4.5 5.5

Alpha spectrum at the theoretical limit of energy resolution

Page 8: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation – Alpha Spectroscopy

Types of detectors Resolution Spectroscopy Calibration/Efficiency Sample Preparation Daily Instrument Checks

Page 9: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Types of detectors (Alpha Spectroscopy)

Older technology Diffused junction detector (DJD) Surface barrier silicon detectors (SSB) Ion Implanted Layers Fully depleted detectors

State-of-the-art technology Passivated implanted planar silicon

detector (PIPS)

Page 10: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

PIPS

Good alpha resolution due very thin uniform entrance window

Surface is more rugged and can be cleaned

Low leakage current Low noise Bakable at high temperatures

Page 11: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Alpha Spectrometer Detector

An example of a passivated implanted planar silicon detector

600 mm2 active area

Resolution of 24 keV (FWHM)

Page 12: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Alpha Spectrometer

Page 13: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Resolution

Broadening of peaks is due to various sources of leakage current – “Noise”

Low energy tails result from trapping of charge carriers which results from the incomplete collection of the total energy deposited

Good resolution increases sensitivity (background below peak is reduced)

Resolution of 10 keV is achievable with PIPS (controlled conditions)

Page 14: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Typical Alpha Spectrum

Page 15: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calibration/Efficiency

Energy calibration Efficiency can be determined

mathematically using Monte-Carlo simulation

Efficiency can be determined using a NIST traceable standard in same geometry as samples

Efficiency determination not always needed with tracers

Page 16: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Sample Preparation

Final sample must be very thin to insure high resolution and minimize tailing. Also should stable & rugged

The following mounting techniques are commonly used: Electrodeposition Micro precipitation Evaporation from organic solutions

Organics must be completely removed

Page 17: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Sample Preparation

Chemical and radiochemical interferences must be removed during preparation Nuclides must be removed which have

energies close to the energies of the nuclide of interest, ie 15 to 30 keV

Ion exchange Precipitation/coprecipitation techniques Chemical extractions

Chemicals which might damage detector must be elimanted

Page 18: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Sample Preparation

A radioactive tracer is used to determine the recovery of the nuclide of interest

Since a tracer is added to every sample, a matrix spiked sample is not required

Page 19: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Sample Counting

Mounts with a small negative voltage can be used to help attract the recoil nucleus away from the detector

Reduces detector contamination

Page 20: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Sample Counting

Analyst can choose distance from detector

Trade off is between efficiency & resolution

Count performed slightly above atm. pressure to reduce contamination

Page 21: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Daily instrument checks

One hour background Pulser check

Stability check

Page 22: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation & Methods:

Liquid Scintillation Counters & Tritium

Richard Sheibley

Pennsylvania Dept of Env Protection

Page 23: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Principle Beta particle emission Energy transferred to Solute Energy released as UV Pulse Intensity proportional to beta

particle initial energy

Page 24: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Low energy beta emitters Tritium – 3H Iodine – 125I, 129I, 131I Radon – 222Rn Nickel – 63Ni Carbon – 14C

Page 25: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Energy Spectrum Isotope specific Beta particle Neutrino Total energy constant

Page 26: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Components Vial with Sample + Scintillator Photomultipliers Multichannel Analyzer Timer Data collection & Output

Page 27: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Variables Temperature Counting room Vial type glass vs. plastic Cocktail Energy window

Page 28: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Other considerations Dark adapt Static Quenching

Page 29: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Interferences Chemical

Absorbed beta energy Optical

Photon absorption

Page 30: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Instrument Normalization Photomultiplier response Unquenched 14C Standard

Page 31: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Performance assessment Carbon-14 Efficiency Tritium Efficiency Chi-square Instrument Background

Page 32: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Liquid Scintillation Counter

Method QC Background

Reagent background Efficiency

Method Quench correction

Page 33: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Tritium 3H (EPA 906.0 & SM7500-3H B)

Prescribed Procedures for Measurement of Radioactivity in Drinking Water

EPA 600 4-80-032 August 1980 Standard Methods 17th, 18th, 19th &

20th

Page 34: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Interferences

Non-volatile radioactive material Quenching materials Double distill – eliminate radium Static Fluorescent lighting

Page 35: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Tritium 3H Method Summary

Alkaline Permanganate Digestion Remove organic material

Distillation Collect middle fraction

Liquid Scintillation Counting

Page 36: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calibration – Method

Raw water tritium standard Distilled Recovery standard

Background Distilled Deep well water

Distilled water tritium standard Distilled water to which 3H added Not distilled

Page 37: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrument Calibration

Calibrate each day of use Instrument Normalization Performance assessment

Carbon-14 Efficiency Tritium Efficiency Instrument Background

NIST traceable standards

Page 38: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculations

3H(pCi/L) = (C-B)*1000 / 2.22*E*V*FWhere:C = sample count rate, cpmB = background count rate, cpmE = counting efficiencyF = recovery factor2.22 = conversion factor, dpm/cpm

Page 39: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculations

Efficiency:E = (D-B)/G

Where:D = distilled water standard count rate, cpmB = background count rate, cpmG = activity distilled water standard, dpm

Page 40: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculations

Recovery correction factorF = (L-B) / (E*M)

Where:L = raw water standard count rate, cpmB = background count rate, cpmE = counting efficiencyM = activity raw water standard (before

distillation), dpm

Page 41: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control

Batch Precision: Sample duplicate OR Matrix spike duplicate Calculate relative percent difference Calculate control limits Should be < 20% Frequency 1 per 20

Page 42: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control, continued

Accuracy Laboratory fortified blank Matrix spike sample

2 – 10 Xs detection limit

Reagent background |reagent background|< detection limit

Instrument drift

Page 43: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control, continued

Daily control charts Acceptance limits Corrective action Preventative maintenance

Page 44: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Standard Operating Procedure

Written Reflect actual practice Standard format – EMMC or NELAC

Page 45: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Demonstration of Proficiency

Initial Method detection limit – MDL 40 CFR 136, Appendix B Alternate procedure

4 reagent blanks < Detection limit (DL)

4 laboratory fortified blanks (LFB) DL < LFB < MCL

Evaluate Recovery and Standard Deviation against method criteria

Page 46: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Demonstration of Proficiency

Ongoing Repeat initial demonstration of

proficiency Alternate procedure

4 Reagent blanks and laboratory fortified blanks

Different batches Non-consecutive days

Blank < Detection limit (DL) LFB met method precision and accuracy

criteria

Page 47: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation & Methods: Strontium 89, 90

Lynn West

Wisconsin State Lab of Hygiene

Page 48: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Method Review

Strontium 89, 90 EPA 905.0, SM 7500-Sr B

Page 49: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Radiochemical Characteristics

Isotope T1/2 Decay Mode

MCLpCi/L

89Sr 50.55 days

Beta 80

90Sr 29.1 years Beta 8

90Y 64.2 hours Beta N/A

Page 50: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Strontium (EPA 905.0, SM 7500-Sr B)

Prescribed Procedures for Measurement of Radioactivity in Drinking Water

EPA 600 4-80-032 August 1980 Standard Methods 17th, 18th, 19th &

20th

Page 51: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental
Page 52: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Strontium Chemistry

Chemically similar to Ca +2 oxidation state in solution Insoluble salts include: CO3 & NO3

“Real Chemistry”

Page 53: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Interferences

Radioactive barium and radium Precipitated as carbonate Removed using chromate precipitation

Non-radioactive strontium Cause errors in recovery

Calcium Precipitated as carbonate Removed by repeated nitrate

precipitations

Page 54: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

Isolate Strontium Measure total strontium Allow strontium to decay Isolate strontium 90 daughter –

yttrium 90 Measure yttrium 90

Page 55: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

1 L acidified sample Isolate Strontium

Add stable Sr carrier Precipitate alkaline and rare earths as

carbonate Re-dissolve

Page 56: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

Isolate Strontium(continued) Precipitate as nitrate Re-dissolve Precipitate as carbonate

Determine chemical yield

Page 57: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

Measure total strontium activity

Determine 90Sr Yttrium in growth – 2 weeks Isolate yttrium Determine 90Y

Page 58: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

Determine 89SrCalculatedTotal strontium minus 90Sr

Page 59: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

905.0 Method Summary

Calculations includeRecovery correction In-growth correction – yttrium

Total strontium Strontium 90

Decay correction – yttrium Isolation of Y to end of count time

Page 60: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculation total strontium

Total strontium activity (D) D = C / 2.22*E*V*R

where:C = net count rate, cpmE = counter efficiency for 90SrV = sample volume, litersR = fractional chemical yield2.22 = conversion factor dpm/pCi

Page 61: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculations cont.

See handout

Page 62: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Calculations cont.

Verify computer programs Decay constants and time intervals

must be in the same units of time Minimum background count time

should be equal to the minimum sample count time

Page 63: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrumentation

Low background gas flow proportional counter P-10 counting gas (10% CH4 & 90% Ar)

Due to in growth and short half-life of 90Y, time is critical

Page 64: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Instrument Calibration

Isotope specific calibration 89Sr 90Sr 90Y

Use NIST traceable standards Perform yearly or after repairs

Page 65: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control

Batch Precision: Sample duplicate OR Matrix spike duplicate Calculate relative percent difference Calculate control limits Should be < 20% Frequency 1 per 20

Page 66: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control, continued

Batch Accuracy Laboratory fortified blank Matrix spike sample

2 – 10 Xs detection limit

Reagent background |reagent background|< detection limit

Instrument drift

Page 67: Environmental Laboratory Accreditation Course for Radiochemistry: DAY THREE Presented by Minnesota Department of Health Pennsylvania Department of Environmental

Quality Control, continued

Daily control charts Acceptance limits Corrective action Preventative maintenance