July 25, 2025
Journal Article

Actinide in Air (Rn-Progeny Rejected) Alpha Spectroscopy with Tensioned Metastable Fluid Detectors

Abstract

This article discusses outcome of research for deriving a methodology and apparatus for ascertaining for the presence of ultratrace-level actinides in air from their alpha emission signatures, while remaining blind to the relatively large (1000× higher activity) alpha emissions from Rn-progeny. Apparatus and techniques were developed to collect and characterize alpha-emitting nuclides of Rn-progeny and actinides in air on a polycarbonate 3?µm pore size continuous air monitor (CAM) filter. A wet-chemistry approach was developed and validated for successfully separating the Rn-progeny alpha emitting isotopes of Po-214 and Po-218, while extracting the actinides (U, Pu, Am) in a fluid mixture that is suitable for conduct of alpha spectroscopy with a centrifugally tensioned metastable fluid detector (CTMFD). The resulting a-TMFD technology was compared against the state-of-art “Alpha-Sentry™” Continuous Air Monitor (CAM) system commonly utilized world-wide. Results indicate that the a-TMFD technology can potentially offer complementary and superior performance in multiple performance categories, and ~18× improvement in the time to detect (e.g., at 0.02 derived air concentration (DAC) within ~3?h, versus ~70?h for Alpha-Sentry) for actinides of interest while also remaining ~100% blind to ~103× higher Rn-progeny background—with the added potential for offering few keV scale energy resolution without resorting to peak shape fitting, versus ~300–400?keV for existing CAM systems.

Published: July 25, 2025

Citation

Hemesath M., N. Boyle, B.C. Archambault, T.H. Lorier, D.P. Diprete, and R. Taleyarkhan. 2022. Actinide in Air (Rn-Progeny Rejected) Alpha Spectroscopy with Tensioned Metastable Fluid Detectors. Journal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science 8, no. 2:Art. No. 022001; Paper No. NERS-20-1188. PNNL-SA-156567. doi:10.1115/1.4049729