Radiometric techniques for the detection and assessment of tritium in aqueous media - a review

Parker, Andrew and Aspinall, Michael and Boxall, Colin and Cave, Frank and Joyce, Malcolm (2023) Radiometric techniques for the detection and assessment of tritium in aqueous media - a review. Progress in Nuclear Energy, 162: 104733. ISSN 0149-1970

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Abstract

Tritium (3H) is one of the hardest isotopes to detect by most traditional radiometric means due to the low energy of the β− emission, (β−MEAN 5.67 keV, β−MAX 18.59 keV). The high mobility of the isotope in groundwater environments and subsequent entry into the food chain constitutes a radiation safety risk justifying assessment. Accordingly, there is a need to measure 3H accurately and efficiently, often in low concentrations, both in laboratory settings and on-line flow-cells for potential in situ measurement requirements. This review covers technologies developed to assess aqueous tritium-containing samples. Of the techniques reviewed, liquid scintillation counting (LSC) is the best performing means of aqueous 3H detection with a minimal detectable activity of 6 × 10−4 Bq L−1 for a 195-min counting time. LSC is also established as the industry standard and is the basis of the first, commercially-available, real-time 3H detection system. This review also covers the other means described in literature for the detection of tritium in aqueous samples, including the use of plastic and inorganic scintillators, imaging plates, both in off-line and on-line modes of operation. Whilst most of these techniques lag LSC in terms of technological maturity, several offer detection sensitivities that could rival LSC, without the need for the sample preparation and waste generation associated with LSC, and providing real-time in situ measurements.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Progress in Nuclear Energy
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? tritiumaqueuous sampleslow-level beta detectionyes - externally fundedenergy engineering and power technologynuclear energy and engineeringwaste management and disposalsafety, risk, reliability and quality ??
ID Code:
197501
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
21 Jul 2023 13:10
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
01 May 2024 00:23