Abstract

Radioactivity standards of tritiated water ( 3H 2O)—disseminated by the Laboratoire Primaire des Rayonnements Ionisants (LPRI) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the national radionuclidic metrology and standardization laboratories of France and U.S.A., respectively— have been intercompared by liquid scintillation (LS) spectrometry. The ratio of the certified massic activities for the two standards was compared to that obtained from direct measurements on matched sets of LS cocktails prepared from the standards. Seven experimental trials (involving a total of 21 counting sources for each standard) were performed for the comparison. The trials were performed under a wide range of experimental conditions, including use of two different LS spectrometers and three series of LS cocktail compositions (with systematically varied 3H detection efficiencies). The results exhibited an apparent mean disagreement between standards of < 0.4% on a relative basis. For contrast, the relative combined standard uncertainty on the massic activity ratio for the two standards, as obtained from their respective certified uncertainty assessments, is about 0.7%.

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