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Method design and validation for the determination of uranium levels in human urine using high-resolution alpha spectrometry

journal contribution
posted on 2008-03-01, 00:00 authored by Elizabeth Manickam, S Sdraulig, R Tinker
Quantification of uranium in human urine is a valuable technique for assessing occupational and public exposure to uranium. A reliable method has been developed and validated in the ARPANSA Radiochemistry Laboratory by means of standard radiochemical separation and purification techniques and measurement using high-resolution alpha spectrometry. This method can be used to evaluate the levels of naturally occurring 234U, 235U and 238U in urine. Method design and validation is the process of defining an analytical requirement, and then confirming that the method under consideration has performance capabilities consistent with what the application requires. The method was designed to measure levels down to 2 mBq/day of total uranium, corresponding to approximately 1/100th of the annual committed effective dose of 20 mSv. Validation tests were developed to assess selectivity, accuracy, recovery and quantification of uncertainty. The radiochemical recovery of this method was measured using 232U tracer. The typical minimum detectable concentration for total uranium for 24-h urine samples is approximately 0.6 mBq/day or 0.019 μg/day.

History

Journal

Journal of environmental radioactivity

Volume

99

Issue

3

Pagination

491 - 501

Publisher

Elservier Ltd.

Location

Amsterdam, Netherlands

ISSN

0265-931X

eISSN

1879-1700

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, Elsevier Ltd.

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