Developed By
Tor Bjørnstad
Section of Radiochemistry
Institute of Chemistry
Faculty of Mathematics and Natural sciences
University of Oslo
Learning Goals
- Understand mother-daughter relations and radioactive equilibrium
- Understand how a radio-nuclide generator works and how it is used
- Understand how radioactivity is "growing in"
- Training in handling radioactive material and safety procedures
The task in this Laboratory Exercise is to record a disintegration curve of
234mPa and from this curve determine the half-life of the nuclide. The
234mPa radionuclide is obtained from a generator system consisting of an ion exchanger column with fixed
234Th where the daughter is milked by a liquid elution process. The α particles from the produced
234mPa-source is recorded by a GM-detector.
Explanation and Exercise Guide
Theory
Principle Behind Mother-Daughter Relationship
Experimental Procedure
Production and Measurement of a 234mPa Nuclide Generator
Questions for the Students
Safety Aspects
- Chemical safety - nothing particularly dangerous, 1 M HCl and 0.1 M AgNO3should of course be handled according to normal safety precautions. DOWEX residues and waste should be collected and handled according to normal procedures.
- Rad. safety - very small amounts of uranyl nitrate is used, so rad. safety is mostly about regulations and not a real health hazard. Remember to collect the DOWEX from the ion-exchange columns in separate containers as it is contaminated with 24-day 234Th (will be none-radioactive after one year).
Equipment
- HCl (MSDS) on 100 mL flasks, one for each student)
- DOWEX 50x4 (MSDS) (50-100 mesh)
- Uranyl Nitrate (MSDS) - UO2(NO3)2
- NaAc (MSDS) + K4[Fe(CN)6]] (MSDS) solution (on 100 mL flasks, one for each student) (prepared by mixing 8 g NaC2H3O2 and 40 g
K4[Fe(CN)6] in 1 L water) - 10% citric acid (MSDS) (on 100 mL flasks, one for each student)
- 0.1 M AgNO3 (MSDS) (on 50 mL flasks)
- Suitable columns which can be fitted with a stopper connected to a rubber ball so it can be pressurized (to quickly elute drops with short lived 234Pa from the column).*** Stop watches (one for each student)
- Sample holders to catch eluted drops from the column and which can be mounted conveniently in the detector chamber
- Detectors - GM counters works well, but we have also used plastic scintillators mounted on PMTs and NaI-detectors. High efficiency is necessary to get good counting statistics even after the first 5-6 minutes.
Preparation for the lab Supervisor
The equipment needed should be ready. The solutions needed should also be prepared. It is usually a good idea to not use to large columns as the time needed for the solution to pas trough the dowex will increase quite a lot with increased volume.
Feedback from Users and Supervisors
Please leave suggestions and feedback in the comments.