Difference between revisions of "KJM5911 Lab Exercise 2 - Radionuclide Generators and Half Life"
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*[[How to Make a 234mPa Radionuclide generator|making the <sup>234m</sup>Pa radionuklide generator]] | *[[How to Make a 234mPa Radionuclide generator|making the <sup>234m</sup>Pa radionuklide generator]] | ||
*[[How to Measure the Half Life of 234mPa|how to measure the half life of <sup>234m</sup>Pa]] | *[[How to Measure the Half Life of 234mPa|how to measure the half life of <sup>234m</sup>Pa]] | ||
− | *[[Determining the Half Life of 234mPa|determining the half life of <sup>234m</sup>Pa]] | + | *[[Determining the Half Life of 234mPa - with MCA system|determining the half life of <sup>234m</sup>Pa]] |
*[[Neutron Activation of Ag|Neutron Activation of Ag]] | *[[Neutron Activation of Ag|Neutron Activation of Ag]] | ||
*[[Analyzing a Two-componet Decay Curve|Analyzing a Two-componet Decay Curve]] | *[[Analyzing a Two-componet Decay Curve|Analyzing a Two-componet Decay Curve]] |
Revision as of 21:33, 4 October 2012
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"
- Separate uranium and thorium using a cation-exchanger
- Training in handling radioactive material and safety procedures
- Understand the principle of neutron activation
- Deconvolute a decay curve with two components
Theory
- Principle Behind Mother-Daughter Relationship
- Cation-exchange Column for Th
- Neutron activation of Ag with a Pu/Be n-source
- Deconvoluting a decay curve with two components
Experimental Procedure
- making the 234mPa radionuklide generator
- how to measure the half life of 234mPa
- determining the half life of 234mPa
- Neutron Activation of Ag
- Analyzing a Two-componet Decay Curve
Safety Aspects
- Chemical safety - nothing particulary dangerous, 2-M HCl and 0.1-M AgNO3 should of course be handled according to normal safety precations. 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 healt hazzard.
- Waste handling. All radioactive waste should be collected, logged and deposited in the dedicated rad. waste accumulation are. Remember to collect the DOWEX from the ion-exchange collumns in separate containers as it is contaminated with 24-day 234Th (will be none-radioactive after one year).