Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_179_0503053906.pdf759.68 KB
Abstract
The analysis of environmental test swipes laden with actinide-bearing particles is a key component
of treaty verification activities and nuclear safeguards inspections. The frequency and importance
of these analyses has resulted in the need for high-quality reference materials with known particle
loadings and compositions for use in proficiency testing, interlaboratory comparisons, and method
development. Recent advancements towards the manufacture of actinide-bearing
microparticulates including the THermally Evaporated Spray for Engineered Uniform particulateS
(THESEUS) production platform, developed at Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL),
have resulted in the availability of highly uniform uranium-bearing particulate reference materials
with tailored isotopic compositions in quantities ranging from nanograms to milligrams. However,
the availability of suitable particle-laden test swipes has lagged. To expand this particulate
generation capability to include particle-laden test swipes, the settling behavior of aerosolized
particles within a static volume of air was leveraged to develop a capability for the manufacture of
swipes with tailorable and uniform particle loading in conjunction with the THESEUS particle
production platform. The developed method was tested using depleted uranium oxide particles,
with 1-micron equivalent circular diameter, to produce batches of particle-laden swipes with
varying particulate loadings. Total uranium content of the generated swipes was measured using
kinetic phosphorescence analysis (KPA), and the preservation of the particulate qualities through
the manufacturing process was assessed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) as well as
large geometry secondary ion mass spectrometry (LG-SIMS). Assessments of inter-swipe
uniformity suggest good agreement of particle loading both within and between batches, with
variation between swipes below 15% in most scenarios, as measured by KPA. Furthermore, the
developed capability displays a high degree of tailorability in the particle dosing on a per-swipe
basis, with a linear relationship including demonstrated loadings ranging from tens of nanograms
to tens of micrograms of uranium per-swipe. The developed method for the generation of particleladen test swipes displays promise for the future manufacture of reference surrogate environmental
swipe specimens, and is expected to enable both future proficiency tests, as well as development
and evaluation of particle extraction techniques.