Recent developments in radiometric and mass spectrometry methods for marine radioactivity measurements

2004 
The most important recent developments in radiometric techniques have been the operation of high efficiency HPGe detectors with anticosmic or antiCompton shielding often placed underground, ship-board measurements of 234Th using gamma-spectrometry or beta-counting and underwater gamma-spectrometry. In mass spectrometry techniques, the availability of high resolution ICP-MS and applications of AMS for the analysis of long-lived radionuclides have opened doors for investigations which previously required too large samples, or were not possible because of lack of sensitivity. These developments are illustrated by several examples of marine radioactivity studies, which include contaminated sites (e.g., Fangataufa Atoll) and open ocean studies (e.g., the Atlantic Ocean) as well as analyses of IAEA reference materials. A comparison of Pu results obtained by alpha-spectrometry, ICP-MS and AMS has shown that a reasonably good agreement has been obtained between all three methods.
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