In
the frame of studies on the safe disposal of nuclear waste,
there is a great interest for understanding the migration behavior
of 99Tc. 99Tc originating from nuclear energy
production and global fallout shows environmental levels down to 107 atoms/g of soil (∼2 fg/g). Extremely low concentrations
are also expected in groundwater after diffusion of 99Tc
through the bentonite constituting the technical barrier for nuclear
waste disposal. The main limitation to the sensitivity of the mass
spectrometric analysis of 99Tc is the background of its
stable isobar 99Ru. For ultratrace analysis, the Accelerator
Mass Spectrometry (AMS) setup of the Technical University of Munich
using a Gas-Filled Analyzing Magnet System (GAMS) and a 14 MV Tandem
accelerator is greatly effective in suppressing this interference.
In the present study, the GAMS setup is used for the analysis of 99Tc in samples of the seawater reference material IAEA-443,
a peat bog lake, and groundwater from an experiment of in situ diffusion
through bentonite in the controlled zone of the Grimsel Test Site
(GTS) within the Colloid Formation and Migration (CFM) project. With
an adapted chemical preparation procedure, measurements of 99Tc concentrations at the fg/g levels with a sensitivity down to 0.5
fg are accomplished in notably small natural water samples. The access
to these low concentration levels allows for the long-term monitoring
of in situ tracer tests over several years and for the determination
of environmental levels of 99Tc in small samples.
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