xvEPA United States Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory PO Box 15027 Las Vegas NV 89114 EPA-600 7-78-105 June 1978 Research and Development Intercomparison of Plutonium-239 Measurements Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development Program Report ------- RESEARCH REPORTING SERIES Research reports of the Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, have been grouped into nine series. These nine broad categories were established to facilitate further development and application of environmental technology. Elimination of traditional grouping was consciously planned to foster technology transfer and a maximum interface in related fields. The nine series are: 1. Environmental Health Effects Research 2. Environmental Protection Technology 3. Ecological Research 4. Environmental Monitoring 5. Socioeconomic Environmental Studies 6. Scientific and Technical Assessment Reports (STAR) 7. Interagency Energy-Environment Research and Development 8. "Special" Reports 9. Miscellaneous Reports This report has been assigned to the INTERAGENCY ENERGY—ENVIRONMENT RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT series. Reports in this series result from the effort funded under the 17-agency Federal Energy/Environment Research and Development Program. These studies relate to EPA'S mission to protect the public health and welfare from adverse effects of pollutants associated with energy systems. The goal of the Pro- gram is to assure the rapid development of domestic energy supplies in an environ- mentally-compatible manner by .providing .the necessary environmental data and control technology. Investigations include analyses of the transport of energy-related pollutants and their health and ecological effects; assessments of, and development.of, control technologies for energy systems; and integrated assessments of a wide range of energy-related environmental issues. This document is available to the public through the National Technical Information Service, Springfield, Virginia 22161 ------- EPA-600/7-78-105 June 1978 INTERCOMPARISON OF PLUTQNIUM-239 MEASUREMENTS by Lee H. Ziegler Monitoring Systems Research and Development Division Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory Las Vegas, Nevada 89114 U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND SUPPORT LABORATORY LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89114 ------- DISCLAIMER This report has been reviewed by the Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory-Las Vegas, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and approved for publication. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not consti- tute endorsement or recommendation for use. 11 ------- FOREWORD Protection of the environment requires effective regulatory actions which are based on sound technical and scientific information. This information must include the quantitative description and linking of pollutant sources, transport mechanisms, interactions, and resulting effects on man and his environment. Because of the complexities involved, assessment of specific pollutants in the environment requires a total systems approach which tran- scends the media of air, water, and land. The Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory-Las Vegas contributes to the formation and enhancement of a sound monitoring data base for exposure assessment through programs designed to: • develop and optimize systems and strategies for moni- toring pollutants and their impact on the environment • demonstrate new monitoring systems and technologies by applying them to fulfill special monitoring needs of the Agency's operating programs. This report describes an interlaboratory study measuring the activity of aqueous solutions of plutonium-239. The study was funded under the 17-agency Federal Energy/Environment Research and Development Program. The data from these measurements are useful in evaluating the state of the art of existing measurement techniques which in turn provides valuable input into the establish- ment of standards and guides, and enforcement activities. The Quality Assurance Branch at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory in Las Vegas encourages the development and implementa- tion of quality control procedures at all levels of sample collection, analysis, data handling and reporting of environmental radiation measurements . and can provide further assistance upon request. George B Morgan Director Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory Las Vegas iii ------- INTRODUCTION The Quality Assurance Branch at the Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory in Las Vegas, Nevada, has maintained an active quality assurance program for the last five years. One major activity of the branch in this program has been repetitive interlaboratory intercomparison studies of radio- activity measurements of environmental media (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Another major activity of the branch has been the calibration and distribution of calibrated radioactivity samples (6). Over 150 State laboratories, Federal laboratories, commercial environmental monitoring laboratories, national laboratories of other countries, nuclear power facilities, and university laboratories have participated in these programs during this time. The Quality Assurance Branch in Las Vegas has maintained a continuing intercomparison1studies program with the National Bureau of Standards through- out its existence (7). One phase of this program has been the occasional distribution of calibrated radioactivity standards to laboratories partici- pating in the Quality Assurance Branch's programs. A previous distribution of an aqueous polonium-210 solution was done as an intercomparison study (8). This report describes an intercomparison study on measurement of activity of aqueous solutions containing plutonium-239. These intercomparison studies provide information about the accuracy that monitoring laboratories produce when measuring the activities of aqueous solutions. Also, they are intended to survey the methodology and equipment currently used by these monitoring laboratories. ------- EXPERIMENTAL In April, 28 calibrated solutions of plutonium-239 were distributed as unknowns to 28 laboratories which had agreed to participate in an intercom- parison study (Appendix) . The calibrated solutions were prepared by gravimetric dilutions of a plutonium standard obtained from a commercial vendor. Since the dilutions were made in 100-ml volumetric flasks, aliquots of two dilutions were distributed. One dilution had an activity on December 1, 1973 of 18.63 disintegrations per second per gram of solution, while the other dilution had an activity of 18.46 disintegrations per second per gram of solution. The impurities, expressed as a percentage of the activity of the plutonium-239 on December 1, 1973, were: Plutonium-238 + Americium-241 (alpha). 0.5% Plutonium-240 (alpha)....3.62% Plutonium-241 (beta) <11% The activities of the impurities were not included in the activities give^i above for the plutonium-239 solutions. Consequently, the total alpha-particle emission rate of the calibrated solution would then be 1.04 times the certified activity value. Besides the calibrated solution, the laboratories were sent one alpha- particle test solution prepared by the National Bureau of Standards with an accompanying report of calibration. A form on which laboratories could report their results and describe the methodology used was also sent to the partici- pating laboratories. This form is similar to that used by the National Bureau of Standards (7) and was used in a previous study (8). The alpha-particle test solution was intended to be used as a calibration standard by the indi- vidual laboratories. By early August, 17 of the laboratories had measured the activity of the plutonium-239 unknown and reported their results. In late August, Calibration Certificates prepared by the Environmental Protection Agency (6) for the calibrated plutonium-239 unknown were sent to all 28 laboratories. The 17 laboratories who returned results are listed in Table 1. Fifteen laboratories reported that they looked for impurities using spectroscopy. One laboratory also measured the beta activity of the solution. Six laboratories indicated that they observed plutonium-238 in the range of 0.1 nuclear transformations per second per gram (nts 1q 1) to 0.4_nts q l, in general agreement with the certified value of 0.5% or 0.09 nts *q 1. One laboratory indicated they observed plutoniuin*242, but they did not quantify the activity of this radionuclide. Six laboratories indicated that they looked for, but did not find the impurities in the solution. A comparison of the mean value of the measurements obtained by the laboratories that did not detect impurities showed no significant difference from that of the laboratories which did report impurity levels. 2 ------- TABLE 1. LIST OF PARTICIPANTS, ALPHA-PARTICLE TEST SOLUTION PLUTONIUM-239 Quality Assurance Program Eastern Environmental Radiation Facility P. O. Box 3009 Montgomery, AL 36109 State of Connecticut Health Laboratories Environmental Chemistry Section 10 Clinton Street Hartford, CT 06101 Midwestern Facility Eberline Instrument Corporation 245 Roosevelt Road West Chicago, IL 60185 State Hygienic Laboratory The University of Iowa Medical Laboratory Building Iowa City, IA 52242 Winchester Engineering and Analytical Center U.S. Food & Drug Administration 109 Holton Street Winchester, MA 01890 Nuclear Facilities and Contract Control Section Division of Radiological Health Bureau of Environmental and Occupational Health Michigan Department of Public Health 3500 N. Logan St., P.O. Box 30035 Lansing, MI 48909 I Eberline Instrument Corporation Albuquerque Laboratory P.O. Box 3874 Albuquerque, NM 87110 Group, H-5, Industrial Hygiene University of California Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory P.O. Box 1663, MS 486 Los Alamos, NM 87544 The order in which participants are listed in this table does not correspond to the order in which results are listed in Table 2 and Figure 1. Sroup H-8 University of California Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory P.O. Box 1663 Los Alamos, NM 87544 Radiological Sciences Laboratory New York State Health Department 30 Russell Road Albany, NY 12206 Mound Laboratory Monsanto Research Corporation P.O. Box 32 Miamisburg, OH 45342 State of Oregon Health Division Radiation Control Section 1400 S.W. 5th Avenue Portland, OR 97201 Radiation Management Corporation 3508 Market Street Philadelphia, PA 19104 South Carolina State Department of Health and Environmental Control 2600 Bull Street Columbia, SC 29201 Lynchburg Research Center P.O. Box 1260 Lynchburg, VA 24505 Radiochemistry Division United States Testing Company, Inc. .2800 George Washington Way Richland, WA 99352 Laboratory of Radiation Ecology 104 Fisheries Center University of Washington Seattle, WA 98105 ------- Six laboratories used alpha spectrometers and six laboratories used gas flow proportional counters. One laboratory used a zinc sulfide phosphor. Four laboratories did not indicate the type of detector they used. The mean value of the measurements obtained by those laboratories using alpha spectro- meters was about the same as that value of those laboratories using gas flow proportional counters. Four laboratories used plutonium-242 as a tracer. One laboratory used plutonium-236 as a tracer. Six laboratories indicated they electroplated their counting sources while five laboratories indicated they prepared their sources by evaporating the solution onto planchets. One laboratory precipi- tated the plutonium using lanthanum trifluoride (La FS). The mean value of the measurements made by laboratories using tracers was not significantly different from that of laboratories that did not use tracers. There was no significant difference between the results of the laboratories that electro- plated their sources and those that evaporated their sources. ------- RESULTS The results reported by the 17 participants are given in Table 2 and Figure 1 as ratios of the participants reported mean values of alpha activity, corrected for decay to the date of calibration, to the EPA-calibrated activity value. This ratio is denoted as (X/EPA). For each X/EPA ratio presented in Figure 1, the linear sums of the random counting error at the 99 percent confidence level/ plus the linear sums of the estimated limits of systematic error as reported by the participants, are shown as an error bar. TABLE 2. RESULTS OF THE PLUTONIUM-239 MEASUREMENTS Laboratory Code Letter A B C D E F G H I X/EPA Ratio 1.020 1.007 0.894 0.823 1.037 0.932 1.049 1.111 1.811 Uncertainty (%) 5 7 * 6 2 17 10 6 7 Laboratory Code Letter J K L M N O P Q X/EPA Ratio 1.028 1.002 1.025 1.153 1.103 4.563 1.439 0.914 Uncertainty (%) 3 10 6 7 4 6 * * * Uncertainties could not be determined for laboratories C, P and Q. ------- Reported Value EPA Value 5 .6 7 8 .9 1.0 1 1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 •o o o > o o .o J3 .5 .6 .7 .8 .9 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Figure 1. Reported results for the plutonium-239 radioactivity unknown solu- tion. Participants in this intercomparison are listed in Table 1. The bars are total estimated errors (random plus estimated systematic errors). Uncer- tainties could not be determined for laboratories C, P and Q. Results from laboratory O are not included. ------- DISCUSSION Twenty-eight laboratories received an alpha-particle test solution pre- pared by the National Bureau of Standards for use as a calibration standard. Fifteen laboratories reported values within ± 20% of the EPA-certified value. Two laboratories data differed from the EPA-certified value by more than 20%, consequently, these data were not used in analyzing the results of this study. Comparisons between the various methodologies were made by examining the mean values and the standard deviation of each group. Inspection of these averages and standard deviations showed nothing significant. It was felt by the author that the sample size was so small that further statistical testing was not warranted. ------- INFERENCES 1. Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory. Environmental Radio- activity Laboratory Intercomparison Studies Program FY 1977. EPA-600/4- 77-001 January 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1977. 17 pp. 2. Jarvis, A. N. , and D. G. Easterly. Preliminary Milk Report. EPA-680/4- 75-007 June 1975. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1975. 36 pp. 3. Jarvis, A. N., R. F. Smiecinski, and D. G. Easterly. The Status and Quality of Radiation Measurements of Water. EPA-600/4-76-017 April 1976. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1976. 23 pp. 4. Easterly, D. G., R. R. Kinnison, A. N. Jarvis, and R. F. Smiecinski. The Status and Quality of Radiation Measurements for Air. EPA-600/4-77-043 October 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1977. 32 pp. 5. Easterly, D. G., R. R. Kinnison, A. N. Jarvis, and R. F. Smiecinski. Status and Quality of Radiation Measurements Food and Human Urine. EPA- 600/4-77-047 October 1977. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1977. 33 pp. 6. Ziegler, L. H., Radioactivity Standards Distribution Program FY 1977. EPA-600/4-76-053 October 1976. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1976. 10 pp. 7. Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory. Radiation Quality Assurance Intercomparison Studies 1974-1975. EPA-600/4-75-014 October 1975. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, Nevada. 1975. 20 pp. 8. Ziegler, L. H. Interlaboratory Intercomparison of Polonium-210 Measure- ments. EPA-600/4-76-054 October 1976. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Las, Vegas, Nevada. 1976. 9 pp. ------- APPENDIX U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS WASHINGTON, D.C. 20234 REPORT OF CALIBRATION PLUTONIUM-239 Alpha-Particle Solution Standard prepared for Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory Las Vegas, Nevada This standard consists of carrier-free plutonium-239 in 4.1 grams of 5.0 molar nitric acid in a flame-sealed borosilicate-glass ampoule. The total number of alpha particles emitted by plutonium-239 plus impurities per second per gram of solution on October 1, 1976 was *99.42 ± 1.0%*. A master solution of carrier-free plutonium-239 was calibrated by depositing weighed aliquots on platinum disks and counting the dried deposits in the NBS "medium-geometry11, def ined-solid-angle (ft 3? 0.4 steradians) , alpha-particle counter with scintillator detector. This standard was then prepared by quantitative mass dilutions of that master solution. Confirmatory measurements of the diluted solu- tions were made using both the "medium-geometry" counter and a liquid-scintillation counter. The measurements of the diluted and master solutions agreed to within 0.2%. The uncertainty in the alpha-particle-emission rate, 1.0 percent, is the linear sum of 0.2 percent, which is the limit of the random error in the def ined-solid- angle, alpha-particle-counter measurements of the master solution at the 99-percent confidence level (3.17 Sm, where Sm is the standard error computed from 11 deter- minations), and 0.8 percent, which is the linear sum of the estimated upper limits of conceivable systematic errors associated with these measurements and the dilutions. Other isotopes of Plutonium, as 'well as americium-241, are present in this solution standard. No attempt was made at NBS to determine the quantities of these impurities. However, the composition of the starting material has been extensively studied and intercompared and the reported composition is given on the reverse side of this report. For the Director, A W. B. Mann, Uiief ~ Radioactivity Section Center for Radiation Research December 8, 1976 ------- Appendix (continued) The composition of plutonium mixture Pu-1 circulated for intercomparison and used as the'starting material for this standard is given below: Isotope Pu-238 Pu-239 Pu-240 Pu-241 Am-241 Total Weight fraction on December W, 197^ 8.32 x 10~6 8.45 x 10"6 0.992602 0.992642 7.311 x 10" 3 7.263 x 10~3 9.028 x 10~5 8.633 x 10~5 6.1 x 10~7 6.7 x 10"7 1.000012 1.000000 Laboratorub LASL LLL LASL LLL LASL LLL LASL LLL LASL LLL LASL LLL Half life0 ( 11 ears) 87.79 24146 6537 14.35 434.1 Average relative a-particle emission rate .an October 1, 197 6a 0.0023 1.0000 0.0270 (0.1358 6~) 0.0004 1.0297 Note that, because the amount of americium-241 is still increasing and, to some extent, compensates for the decay of the plutonium, the total alpha- particle-emission rate will remain within 0.2% of the certified value for more than 100 years. a. Date of purification. b- LASL Las Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Las Alamos, New Mexico. LLL = Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, Livermore, California. t. The half lives used are taken from appendix B, American•National Standard Calibration Techniques for the Calorimetric Assay of Plutonium Bearing Solids Applied to Nuclear Materials Control, N15.22 1975, except for the half life of plutonium-239, which is the value calculated from the composition data above and the measured total alpha-particle-e-mission rate. d. Date of calibration. 10 ------- TECHNICAL REPORT DATA (Please read Instructions on the reverse before completing) REPORT NO. EPA-600/7-78-105 3. RECIPIENT'S ACCESSION NO. 4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE INTERCOMPARISON OF PLUTONIUM-239 MEASUREMENTS 5. REPORT DATE June 1978 6. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION CODE AUTHOR(S) Lee H. Ziegler, Quality Assurance Branch Monitoring Systems Research and Development Division 8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION REPORT NO . PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory Office of Research and Development U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Las Vegas, Nevada 89114 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT NO. INE625 11. CONTRACT/GRANT NO. 12. SPONSORING AGENCY NAME AND ADDRESS U.S. Rnvironmental Protection Agency- Las Veaas, NV Office of Research and Development Environmental Monitorina and Sunnort Laboratory Las Vegas, Nevada 89114 13. TYPE OF REPORT AND PERIOD COVERED final 14. SPONSORING AGENCY CODE EPA/600/07 15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES 16. ABSTRACT In 1977 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency distributed calibrated solutions of plutonium-239 to laboratories interested in participating in an intercomparison study of plutonium analysis. Participants were asked to perform a quantitative radioactivity analysis of the solution. The results reported by all the partici- pating laboratories are given here. Eighty-eight- percent of the reported activity values were within ± 20 percent of the activity value certified by the Environmental Protection Agency. 17. KEY WORDS AND DOCUMENT ANALYSIS DESCRIPTORS b.lDENTIFIERS/OPEN ENDED TERMS c. COS AT I Held/Group plutonium calibration radioactivity reliability intercalibration intercomparison National Bureau of Standards 07 B 14 D 18 B, H 18. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT RELEASE TO PUBLIC 19. SECURITY CLASS (ThisReport) UNCLASSIFIED 21. NO. OF PAGES 16 20. SECURITY 'CLASS (This page) UNCLASSIFIED 22. PRICE EPA Form 2220-1 (Rev. 4-77) PREVIOUS EDITION IS OBSOLETE ------- |