Problem: The Department of Energy (DOE) must ensure that effluent waters leaving contaminated DOE sites do not affect the public's safety or health. Alpha-emitting radioisotopes, such as Uranium-238 (238U)/Uranium-234 (234U) and Plutonium (239Pu), are rated by the U.S. EPA as class A carcinogens with very low regulated limits in water. Uranium also has a high chemical toxicity. The EPA proposed maximum concentration limit for uranium in public drinking water supplies is 20 ppb (30 pCi/l), equivalent to an emission of 58 alphas per minute in 1 liter of water. For reference, the world's sea water has a uniform uranium concentration of 3.3 ppb. Currently, surface and ground waters at contaminated DOE sites are monitored for alpha emitters (and other contaminants) by intermittent sampling, with analysis at a central laboratory. Principal shortcomings of the current approach are that it: does not capture every spike in radionuclide levels, has high end-to-end total costs, has a long time delay between sampling and data availability, is prone to errors and mistakes due to the multiple handling and manual processing steps involved, and requires awkward and expensive archiving of samples. Solution: Under DOE contract, Thermo Power Corporation has demonstrated a new technology which permits extremely sensitive counting of alpha emitters in water, providing high-resolution alpha spectrometry . Individual radionuclides can be assayed simultaneously, based on their different alpha energies. This new technology provides the basis for an on-line, real-time monitor of alphaemitting radionuclides, both for effluent streams leaving DOE sites and for process streams.
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K.D. Patch
Power Grid Corporation (India)
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K.D. Patch (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75c2bc6e9836116a24bb9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18405761