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laboratory_exercises:quench_corrections_in_lsc

Lab Exercise - Quench Corrections in Liquid Scintillation Counting

Developed by

Center for Radiochemistry and Nuclear Materials
Department of Chemistry
Loughborough University


Learning Goals

To measure the true activity of a heavily quenched 14C sample by the channels ratio method.


Explanation and Exercise Guide

Theory

In liquid scintillation counting there are two forms of quenching, chemical and colour quenching. Chemical quenching is when a compound competes with the solute molecules (PPO, POPOP, dimethyl POPOP, etc.) for the excitation energy of the solvent. These quenching compounds absorb this energy but do not emit light when de-excited . Colour quenching is the partial absorption of the light produced by the solutes, thus reducing the light incident on the photo-cathode of the photomultiplier tube. This may occur to some extent if suspended material is present, but occurs to a larger extent in coloured solutions. The liquid scintillation counter acts as a spectrometer producing a beta spectrum. The result of quenching of either form effectively is to move the spectrum to lower energy (see the graph below):

 Effect of Quenching on Beta Spectrum

Whenever a series of samples is counted, either the efficiency and hence quenching must be constant, or the efficiency of counting must be determined for every sample. It is essential therefore to ascertain whether quenching is occurring and to correct for this when determining counter efficiency.

There are, essentially, three main ways of correcting for quenching:

1. Internal Standard
A known amount of active material is added to all samples which are then recounted. A comparison of the activity is added, and the increase in count will enable the efficiency of counting to be calculated. Note: Efficiency = (Increase in count (cpm) / Total activity added (dpm) ) * 100%

2. External Standard
An external radioactive source, e.g., 137Cs is brought into a fixed position close to the liquid scintillation samples which are recounted. The increase in count rate can be used in calibration to indicate the efficiency of counting. This method is commonly used in automatic scintillation counters and often combined with method 3.

3. Channels Ratio Method (this experiment uses this method)
Since the effect of quenching is to move the beta spectrum to lower energies, if the spectrum is counted in two separate channels the ratio of the counts in the two channels will be a measure of the movement in the spectrum and hence an indication of the degree of quenching taking place (see the figure)

The use of various channel ratios, R, has been suggested:
e.g. R = count in channel 1 / count in channels (1+2), or R = count in channel 2/ count in channel 1 etc.

All have valid applications for particular instruments and/or isotopes.


Experimental Procedure

  1. The active compound to be used is 14C-labelled n-hexadecane already mixed with liquid scintillation cocktail. You have been given 15 cm3 of this in a plastic scintillation vial.
  2. Ask a demonstrator what the disintegration rate (d.p.m) of the 14C-labelled hexadecane is.
  3. 15 cm3 of the pure scintillation cocktail should be pipetted into a second vial as background.
  4. Put both vials in a counting rack and insert the Protocol 25 flag on the left hand side of the rack. Make sure the flag has been pushed to the left hand side. Place the rack on the right hand side of the instrument and press F2 to start counting.
  5. Count both sample and background. Note the counts per minute (c.p.m.) in both channels (regions) A and B, and note the energies of these channels (A = 50-160 keV and B = 50-80 keV).
  6. Results will be printed but make note of ongoing results in your lab book as the instrument is shared with other students doing other experiments.
  7. Remove rack and samples from the instrument. Before recounting any sample, make sure that the flag has been pushed to the left hand side again.
  8. Add 10 μl of CCl4 using the automatic pipette to the 14C-labelled hexadecane sample, shake well, and recount. It is not necessary to recount the background sample.
  9. Add another 10 μl of CCl4 to the same vial and recount.
  10. Then add successively 10, 20, 25, 25, 50 and 50 μl of CCl4 and recount each time.
  11. Be very careful to make sure there are no drops on the outside of the automatic pipette when using it. (The small overall volume changes caused by the addition of the CCl4 can be ignored).
  12. Measure the activity of the quenched unknown(s).
  13. Calculate the efficiencies (as percentages) of all the recorded c.p.m. measurements (corrected for background) in each channel, i.e. (100 x c.p.m./d.p.m.).
  14. Plot graph of efficiency against CCl4 amount for both channels on the same axes.
  15. Plot a graph of counting efficiency in channel A against the channel ratio (c.p.m. in channel A / c.p.m. in channel B).
  16. Using the plot produced, determine the true activity (d.p.m.) of the unknown sample).


Questions for the Students

What are the energies of channels 1 and 2? Why does the counting efficiency decrease as more quenching agent is added?


Safety Aspects

  • Disposable gloves and eye protection should be worn to avoid direct contact with the radioactive material and scintillation fluid.
  • DO NOT dispose of any liquid or solid waste down sinks or in waste bins. Place in the red waste buckets provided.
  • The addition of carbon tetrachloride should be carried out in a fume cupboard


Preparation for the Lab Supervisor

Equipment

Liquid scintillation counter
10-200 μl autopipette


Consumables

Scintillation cocktail
Scintillation vials
Carbon tetrachloride
200 μL tips


Radioactive sources

15 mL of 14C n-hexadecane in scintillation cocktail at 0.213 kBq/mL) Standards 14C #107 & 3H #108

laboratory_exercises/quench_corrections_in_lsc.txt · Last modified: 2023-09-16 16:56 by Susanna Salmien-Paatero