Claims
- 1. An atmospheric tritium sampler comprising:
- (a) a means for providing and containing a carrier gas, said carrier gas comprising a mixture of H.sub.2 and a diluting gas, the H.sub.2 concentration in said carrier gas comprising less than 4 per cent of said mixture;
- (b) manifold means for drawing in an air sample through an air intake port and said carrier gas through a carrier gas intake port and for exhausting a mixture thereof through an output port, said air sample containing moisture and HT therein;
- (c) regulating means for metering the flow of carrier gas to said manifold means;
- (d) a first moisture trap, connected to receive the exhaust from said manifold means, for adsorbing the moisture from said air sample and exhausting the balance of said air sample/carrier gas mixture;
- (e) combustion chamber means, connected to receive the exhaust from said first moisture trap, for combusting H.sub.2 and HT and producing water therefrom;
- (f) a second moisture trap connected to and separate from said combustion chamber means, said second moisture trap receiving the exhaust from said combustion chamber means and adsorbing said produced water; and
- (g) discharge means for exhausting the balance of said air sample/carrier gas mixture from said second moisture trap into the atmosphere.
- 2. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 1 wherein said combusting means comprises a chamber and a palladium sponge catalyst disposed therein.
- 3. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 2 wherein said first and second moisture traps comprise a silica gel.
- 4. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 3 wherein said hydrogen concentration in said carrier gas is 3 per cent.
- 5. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 4 further comprising sampling means for determining the air sample flow rate.
- 6. The atmospheric tritium sample of claim 5 wherein air sampling means comprises a rotometer, a first three way valve, a second three way valve, and a return segment, said first three way valve connected to said air intake port and said rotometer, said second three way valve connected to said carrier gas intake port and said rotometer, such that said air sample and said, carrier gas are diverted to said rotometer and to said manifold means from said rotometer through said return segment when the flow rate of said air sample need to be determined and said air sample and carrier gas bypass said rotometer under normal operation.
- 7. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 6 further comprising a third moisture trap disposed between said first moisture trap and said combustion chamber means, said third moisture trap providing redundant moisture trapping capabilities to said first moisture trap.
- 8. The atmospheric tritium sampler of claim 7 wherein said diluting gas is comprised of nitrogen.
- 9. A method for extracting tritium from an atmosphere air sample comprising:
- (a) providing a carrier gas, said carrier gas comprising a mixture of H.sub.2 and a diluting gas, the H.sub.2 concentration in said carrier gas comprising less than 4 per cent of said mixture;
- (b) creating a mixture with known concentration of said air sample and said carrier gas;
- (c) drawing moisture from said air sample/carrier gas mixture in a first moisture trap and exhausting the balance of said mixture into a combustion chamber;
- (d) combusting H.sub.2 and HT present in said air sample/carrier gas mixture to form tritiated water therefrom, and exhausting said mixture into a second moisture trap; and
- (e) trapping said tritiated water in a second moisture trap and exhausting the balance of said air sample/carrier gas mixture into the atmosphere.
CONTRACTUAL ORIGIN OF THE INVENTION
The U.S. Government has rights to this invention pursuant to Contract No. DE-AC02-76CH03073 between the U.S. Department of Energy and Princeton University.
US Referenced Citations (15)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
Number |
Date |
Country |
0144796 |
Aug 1983 |
JPX |
0070398 |
Apr 1985 |
JPX |
0122394 |
Jun 1985 |
JPX |
0675342 |
Jul 1979 |
SUX |
2040899 |
Sep 1980 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (2)
Entry |
Fusion Technology, vol. 8, Sep. 1985, pp. 2206-2212, McKay et al. |
Tellus XXVI (1974), 1-2, "Atmospheric HT and HTO", Ostlund et al., pp. 91-101. |