4.5 Article

Porous chromatographic materials as substrates for preparing synthetic nuclear explosion debris particles

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10967-013-2563-2

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Synthetic nuclear explosion debris; Nuclear forensics; Trace metals analysis; Controlled-pore glass; Core-shell silica; Matrix sequestration

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  1. National Nuclear Security Administration, Office of Nonproliferation and Engineering, NA-22 under the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-AC05-75RLO1830]

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Several porous chromatographic materials were investigated as synthetic substrates for preparing surrogate nuclear explosion debris particles. Eighteen metals, including some of forensic interest, were loaded onto materials by immersing them in metal solutions (556 mg/L of each metal) to fill the pores, applying gentle heat (110 A degrees C) to drive off water, and then treating them at high temperatures (up to 800 A degrees C) in air to form less soluble metal species. High-boiling-point metals were uniformly loaded on spherical controlled-pore glass to emulate early fallout, whereas low-boiling-point metals were loaded on core-shell silica to represent coated particles formed later in the nuclear fallout-formation process. Analytical studies characterized material balance and the formation of recalcitrant species. Metal loading was 1.5-3 times higher than expected from the pore volume alone, a result attributed to surface coating. Most metals were passively loaded; that is, solutions filled the pores without active metal discrimination. However, niobium and tin concentrations were lower in solutions after pore filling, and were found in elevated concentrations in the final products, indicating selective loading. High-temperature treatments caused reduced solubility of several metals, and the loss of some volatile species (rhenium and tellurium). Sample preparation reproducibility was high (the inter- and intra-batch relative standard deviations were 7.8 and 0.84 %, respectively) indicating suitability for use as a working standard for analytical methods development. We anticipate future standardized radionuclide-loaded materials will find use in radioanalytical methods development and/or serve as a starting material for the synthesis of more complex nuclear explosion debris forms (e.g., Trinitite).

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