Production+and+Measurement+of+a+234mPa+Nuclide+Generator

Back to exercise > > =How to Measure the Half Life= > For this part of the exercise, you will use a GM-probe connected to a simple counter to determine the disintegration rate of 234m Pa. > > Before you get your sample, make sure you know exactly what to do. Test the counting procedure without a sample to ensure that this is the case. > > 1 Make a god background measurement, i.e. use a long counting time (at least 30 min). It would be smart to start the background measurement before you prepare the radionuclide generator, as this will take at least one hour. Then you can start directly with the 234m Pa measurements once the generator is ready. > > > 2 Select a preset counting time of 60 s. Make a table in which you can write down your results. > 3 Get a stopwatch and learn how to use it. > 4 You will count your sample repeatedly in 60 s intervals in order to get the disintegration curve for 234m Pa. Between each interval a break of 30 s is recommended for writing down the result, clearing the spectrum/counter and prepare for the next measurement. Make sure you write down the exact time you start each counting - do not cheat to fit your planned schedule, write down the actual time! > 5 Write down the total number of counts in the spectrum for each measurement. > 6 Repeat the 60 s counting until there is no more 234m Pa left, then do a 600 s background measurement (remember to change the preset counting time). > 7 Repeat the measurement so you get two complete disintegration curves for 234m Pa. > > > =How to Measure the Half Life with a MCA system= > ====Introduction==== > For this part of the exercise, you will use a NaI detector connected to a Multi-Channel Analyzer (MCA) to determine the disintegration rate of 234m Pa. An alternative and more direct, but "old-fashion" method, is to use a GM-tube connected directly to a simple counter. > > If you look at the radiation from 234m Pa (look it up in your nuclear chart!) you will notice that 234m Pa only emits very weak gamma-rays. However, due to the high-energy beta-particle we can still measure 234m Pa since this high-energy particle will be able to penetrate through the protective shield around the NaI and interact with the NaI crystal. Alternately, we could mount e.g. a plastic detector (NE 102A or similar) on a PM-tube and use this instead. The results will largely be the same (but the NaI is more sensitive to gamma-background, which add uncertainty to the background subtraction). > > Principle > This description assumes you have the Maestro MCA software from ORTEC. If you are using an alternative system, you will have to consult the manual to figure out how to use it. The procedure should not be very different, though. > > We want to make successive 60 s measurements to determine the half-life curve of 234m Pa. This can be done manually by successive starting-waiting-stopping-saving-clearing operations. > > However, with a modern system this tiresome procedure can be automated: In Maestro jargong you do this by preparing a job-description file (it would be called a script file or batch file in most other software). This file contain all the instructions you would have to execute, but can be simplified by using the built-in loop structure. Furthermore, once running, it will execute the correct commands at exactly the right time. > > Since the commands execute very rapidly, you will also be able to spend practically all the time during the 234m Pa decay actually counting, something which is not possible if you are doing everything manually. > > ====Job-description file==== > set_preset_real 60 > loop 15 > clear > start > wait > save m:\spectra\KJM5911_D130_A???.chn end_loop > set_preset_real 300 > clear > start > wait > save > m:\spectra\KJM5911_D130_Background.chn > > > Notice that we have added a 5-min measurement to check for residual activity after the 234m Pa has decayed. Any residual activity would be from break-through of 234 Th from the column. > > ==== ==== > ====Procedure==== > Contrary to a simple counting system, the MCA will save spectra containing counts vs. energy. Since we are measuring beta particles, the spectra do not contain specially interesting information and we will simply sum up all the counts in the spectrum and use this number for the decay curve. > > The procedure for measuring the 234m Pa decay is as follows: > > 1 Measure a background spectrum for as long as possible (e.g. during preparation of the radionuclide generator). Remember to save the spectrum and the file name! > 2 "Milk" 20 drops into a sample cup from the generator as quickly as possible. Use a stopwatch and start it at the 10 drop. > 3 Put the sample cup on the detector (you should protect the detector surface with a thin plastic sheet to avoid contamination etc.). > 4 Start the job-file and note down the time difference between milking and starting. Now, sit back and relax! Alternatively (better), if the job-file is saving spectra to a network disk, you can analyze the spectra as they are produced (using another pc which can read the same disk). > 5 When the job-file finishes, repeat the measurement. (Remember to rename or move your spectra, otherwise they will be deleted or the job-file stops.) > > From the spectra you should get the following data (by opening each spectrum in Maestro): The measurement start time and the gross count (total number of counts in the spectrum). Use the "sum" command to get the total number of counts (the spectrum must contain no region-of-interest markings). > = = > =Determining the Half-Life= > Use a high-quality data plotting and fitting program (e.g. Origin) to analyse the data. The fitting must take the uncertainity into account (do not use Excel), otherwise you will get the wrong result. > > Notice that you always shall use the 1/3 of the time into each measuremnent as the "middle time point". This is due to decay - after 1/3 of the time you will have equally many counts before and after the 1/3 point (i.e. it is the "middle point". > > 1 For each datapoint calculate the net count (gross count - background count), the uncertainity of the net count (based on uncertainity of both the gross count and the background count). You might want to use e.g. MS Excel or similar for doing this. > 2 Enter your data in a table ("worksheet" in Origin jargong): Include measurment time (relative to start of sampling) as x-value, the net count as y-value, and the uncertainity as y-error. > 3 Plot the data - does it look ok? > 4 Use the Origin data-fitting functionality to determine the measured half-life and associated uncertainity. > > Alternativ/Extra: Plot the gross counts instead of the net counts and ask Origin to fit both the background and the decay.
 * 1) Make a 0.1 M solution of uranyl nitrate or acetate.
 * 2) Use 0.5 mL of the uranyl solution per cartridge. Use a syringe to push the solution through the cartridge.
 * 3) Wash the cartridge using 1.0 M HCl. After 2 mL check with NaAC+ K 4 (Fe(CN) 6 ) if there is any precipitate uranium precipitate.
 * 4) Wash the chloride away with 0.5 M citric acid. After 2 mL check with silver nitrate if there is any chloride precipitation precipitation.
 * 5) Wait X min for the ingrowth how many minutes are needed?
 * 6) Push 2 mL of citric acid through the cartridge, insert the aluminum counting-vessel into the GM counter and measure the decay of the Pa.
 * 7) After this push 2 mL of citric acid through the cartridge, insert the cartridge into the GM counter measure the ingrowth of Pa
 * [[image:Lab_Radionuclide_generator_Counting_UO2.jpg width="638" height="345"]] ||
 * Fig 3: Insertion of aluminum counting-vessel into a detector. ||