RI 5801 Reproducibility Of Tritium Analysis Of Organic Compounds Using A Liquid Scintillation Spectrometer ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Marvin L. Whisman
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
18
File Size:
2174 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1961

Abstract

Several parameters controlling the reproducibility of tritium determina¬tion in organic compounds by liquid scintillation counting were evaluated by the Federal Bureau of Mines. These included optimum volume of scintillator solution for maximum counting efficiency, reproducibility of counting a sealed commercial standard and comparison with duplicate counts on laboratory-prepared samples. The error introduced by using microliter pipets, optical differences in counting vials, reproducibility of counting organic samples where quenching is a factor, reproducibility of counting laboratory-prepared samples with an added internal standard, optimum ratio of internal standard activity to sample activity, effect of sample volume upon counting efficiency, count rate at which coincidence losses become apparent, and reproducibility of organic compound radioassay by the standard addition technique are outlined. From the evaluation of these parameters, a technique that can be applied routinely to organic compounds containing tritium has been established, and details are included in this report.
Citation

APA: Marvin L. Whisman  (1961)  RI 5801 Reproducibility Of Tritium Analysis Of Organic Compounds Using A Liquid Scintillation Spectrometer ? Summary

MLA: Marvin L. Whisman RI 5801 Reproducibility Of Tritium Analysis Of Organic Compounds Using A Liquid Scintillation Spectrometer ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1961.

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