Atmospheric Moisture
Sampling
Atmospheric moisture is collected by pulling air through a
column of absorbent material (i.e., silica gel) to absorb water vapor.
The water is then extracted from the absorbent material by heat
distillation. The resulting water samples are then analyzed for tritium
using liquid scintillation. Starting in 2002 the ESER program began an
evaluation of Drierite (anhydrous calcium sulfate) as an absorbent
material. Twenty-six atmospheric moisture samples were obtained during
the second quarter of 2002 from Atomic City, Blackfoot CMS, Idaho Falls,
and Rexburg CMS. However, seventeen of the samples, all collected using
drierite, yielded invalid results at the ISU analytical laboratory. It
was determined by ISU that the drierite contains a contaminant, yet
unidentified, that is released during the extraction process and
produces increasing counts during liquid scintillation analysis (Claver
and Arndt 2003). For this reason, drierite will no longer be used as a
collection medium Eleven valid results were reported
for the second quarter: five from Atomic City and six from Idaho Falls.
Each result, shown in Table C-4, was greater
than its 2s uncertainty. The results were all well below the DOE DCG for
tritium in air of 1 ´ 10-7
mCi/mL (3.7
´ 10-3 Bq/mL). The
maximum value was 9.3 ´ 10-12
mCi/mL of air (3.4
´ 10-7 Bq/mL of air),
collected at Idaho Falls on 5/31/02.
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