4.5 Article

Thorium determination in water samples by liquid scintillation counting after its separation by cloud point extraction

Journal

JOURNAL OF RADIOANALYTICAL AND NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY
Volume 287, Issue 1, Pages 261-265

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10967-010-0677-3

Keywords

Thorium; Cloud point extraction; Aqueous solutions; Liquid scintillation counting

Funding

  1. Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation [ANABATHMISI/PAGIO/0308/04]
  2. University of Cyprus

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The aim of this study is the separation and preconcentration of thorium from aqueous solutions by cloud point extraction (CPE) and its the radiometric determination by liquid scintillation counting (LSC). For CPE, tributyl phosphate (TBP) was used as the complexing agent and (1,1,3,3-Tetramethylbutyl) phenyl-polyethylene glycol (Triton X-114) as the surfactant. The radiometric measurements were performed after phase separation by mixing of the surfactant phase with the liquid scintillation cocktail. The effect of experimental conditions such as pH, ionic strength (e. g. [NaCl]) and the presence of other chemical species (e. g. Ca2+ and Fe (3+) ions, and humic acid colloids) on the CPE separation recovery have been investigated at constant reactant ratio (m(TBP)/m(Triton) = 0.1). According to the experimental results the maximum chemical recovery is (60 +/- 5)% at pH 3. Regarding the other parameters, generally Ca2+ and Fe3+ ions as well as the presence of colloidal species in solution (even at low concentrations) results in significant decrease of the chemical recovery of uranium. On the other hand increasing NaCl concentration leads to enhancement of chemical recovery. Generally, the method could be applied successfully for the radiometric determination of thorium in water solutions with relatively increased thorium content.

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