The measurement of Ra and the identification of Ra-bearing minerals are important for studying the behavior of radium in the environment. Various instruments for measuring Ra are currently used: among the radiometric techniques that measure in bulk (no spatialization), there are gamma spectrometers and alpha spectrometers. Other instruments such as SEM-EDS can map the chemical elements thus providing information on the distribution of Ra, but are limited for ultra-trace analyses on natural geomaterials. Finally, autoradiography techniques can locate radioactivity, but are limited to the identification of the contribution of Ra when the U series is complete. This study focuses on spectroscopic autoradiography, a method for measuring both the energy of the alpha particle emissions and their positions on the autoradiograph. A gas detector based on a parallel ionization multiplier technology was used for this purpose. Alpha particle energy is dependent on the emitting radionuclides. In order to track the Ra, the energy spectrum of the U series was studied with modeling software. It appears possible to apply a thresholding on the energy spectrum to discriminate the Ra from the first alpha emitters of the U decay chain (i.e. U, U and Th, all below 5 MeV). The developed method was applied to a U-mill tailing sample prepared as a thin section. The sample was heterogeneous in terms of radioactivity and was not at secular equilibrium with U, as expected. The Ra was identified and localized, and different regions of interest were also analyzed with SEM-EDS elements cartography. This revealed Ra-rich barite (BaSO₄) phases measured at 3 ppm on average and containing no uranium; and uranium in siderite (FeCO), showing a strong Ra deficit compared with secular equilibrium. Spectroscopic autoradiography opens up possibilities for the analysis of heterogeneous geological samples containing natural alpha emitters such as U and Ra: the Ra can be localized and quantified at ultra-trace content, and the method developed can also identify newly (young) uranium phases by measuring U/Ra activity disequilibrium.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2024.107392 | DOI Listing |
J Environ Radioact
March 2024
IC2MP - HydrASA, Poitiers University UMR, 7285, CNRS, France. Electronic address:
The measurement of Ra and the identification of Ra-bearing minerals are important for studying the behavior of radium in the environment. Various instruments for measuring Ra are currently used: among the radiometric techniques that measure in bulk (no spatialization), there are gamma spectrometers and alpha spectrometers. Other instruments such as SEM-EDS can map the chemical elements thus providing information on the distribution of Ra, but are limited for ultra-trace analyses on natural geomaterials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Cell Biol
November 2021
Austrian BioImaging/CMI, Vienna BioCenter Core Facilities GmbH (VBCF), Vienna, Austria. Electronic address:
In imaging, penetration depth comes at the expense of lateral resolution, which restricts the scope of 3D in-vivo imaging of small animals at micrometer resolution. Bioimaging will need to expand beyond correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) approaches to combine insights about in-vivo dynamics in a physiologically relevant 3D environment with ex-vivo information at micrometer resolution (or beyond) within the spatial, structural and biochemical contexts. Our report demonstrates the immense potential for biomedical discovery and diagnosis made available by bridging preclinical in-vivo imaging with ex-vivo biological microscopy to zoom in from the whole organism to individual structures and by adding localized spectroscopic information to structural and functional information.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Cosmet Sci
April 2021
Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, Brazil.
Consumers are attracted to the latest fashion trends and different looks. This drives the search for novel hair treatments. Some chemicals present in hair treatment products can penetrate the hair shaft.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Drug Deliv Rev
January 2020
Wellman Center for Photomedicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, CNY149-3, 13(th) St, Charlestown, MA 02129, United States of America. Electronic address:
Understanding the delivery and diffusion of topically-applied drugs on human skin is of paramount importance in both pharmaceutical and cosmetics research. This information is critical in early stages of drug development and allows the identification of the most promising ingredients delivered at optimal concentrations to their target skin compartments. Different skin imaging methods, invasive and non-invasive, are available to characterize and quantify the spatiotemporal distribution of a drug within ex vivo and in vivo human skin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
April 2019
Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf, Institute of Resource Ecology, Dresden, Germany.
In this study a novel technique, micro-focus time-resolved laser-induced luminescence spectroscopy (µTRLFS) is presented to investigate heterogeneous systems like granite (mainly consisting of quartz, feldspar, and mica), regarding their sorption behavior. µTRLFS is a spatially-resolved upgrade of conventional TRLFS, which allows point-by-point analysis of single minerals by reducing the beam size of the analytic laser beam to below the size of mineral grains. This provides visualization of sorption capacity as well as speciation of a luminescent probe, here Eu.
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