“…Another advantage of calorimetry is that a large amount of radioactive material may be directly measured without introducing errors resulting from diluting the original material to a lower radioactive level (sometimes by a factor of 10 8 ; Mann et al, 1961), which is required by the ionization counting system. The elegance of the calorimetry experimental design greatly reduces the introduction of systematic errors, and this is a prime reason why it is widely used for various applications (Rudy et al, 1984;Mann and Unterweger, 1995;Colle´and Zimmerman, 2001;Stump et al, 2005). While constant source, counting geometry, dead-time correction and discrimination levels have to be all considered within a gas counting system, the source of calorimetry can be enclosed in the glass or metal container and simply measured by its power output (Ramthun, 1973).…”