2 ER ORT RIE

46
.
.
232
.
.
.
U spike was determined by comparison
Tne distintegration rate of the

ttre activities of aliquots (in quadriplicate) of the 2321, spike and a 038)
ster tied solution electroplated simultaneously onto platinum discs.

The

238

U

"+yens used for the standard were prepared by dissolving precisely weighted
ave ts Of 99°¢ pure 238), “D-38" metal supplied by the Lawrence Livermore
oratory.

The 20854 spike was supplied as a radiochemical standard solution by the

r2it three years by intercomparing the radioactivity of plated samples with
s.5.6,, Battelle N. W. and the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory.
Replicate determinations of the plutonium concentration in a dissolved
wetsront (section 8-10 cm of core B-2) were performed to provide an estimate
“fees analytical precision of the radiochemical procedures for plutonium
as'ysis.
*1* 9,

The quantity of sediment (dry wt.) in each aliquot processed was
The chemical yield calculated from the counting data for these

sevTles ranged from 22.6 to 40.8 per cent.

The precision for the 23942405,

x terrination was 5.3% of the mean concentration at 2. S.D. for the six
avzivses.

The precision for 2385, measurement was 11% of the mean at 2. S.D.

‘cr the six analyses.

The higher deviation about the mean for 2385 replicates

's probably due to poorer counting statistics (average of 124 counts/800

wae), as all six 238py concentrations found were within 2. S.D0. counting
evrers of each other.

ikpepe + peer

a nee

rates in the 238 peak vs. 5000 counts/800 minutes in the 2297?*°pqutonium

RE epmI

~~ sooner mam et

FAee eeeee em gabe

ep OT

ae RUIN oe ae mpe

hreshar/Searle Corporation and has been calibrated several times during the

4.2-4

Quality control
Problems of individual sample contamination were addressed

‘« the inclusion of spiked reagent blanks inserted into the normal flow of
Sesples which were processed.

From several such reagent blanks, no significant

Select target paragraph3