Abstract

Long-lived fissiogenic technetium, 99Tc (half-life, 2.11 × 105 yrs), is a byproduct of the 235U and 239Pu fission in nuclear reactors and is a major component in nuclear waste. Hence, the monitoring of 99Tc activity in the environmental samples is essential. Techniques used to measure 99Tc in environmental samples include radiometric and non-radiometric approaches. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) has some advantages among the methods due to its high sample throughput, better selectivity, and commercial availability. Rhenium (Re) is often used as the non-isotopic tracer during 99Tc measurement by ICP-MS. From this perspective, studying the separation behavior of Re from the aqueous matrix can provide helpful insight regarding the ecological monitoring of 99Tc. In the current work, three extraction chromatographic resins (ECRs), MetaSEP AnaLig Tc-01, MetaSEP AnaLig Tc-02, and Eichrom TRU, have been used to separate Re from the aqueous matrix. Operating variables, such as solution pH, choice of eluent and eluent concentration, matrix cation effect, and retention capacity, have been studied to optimize the separation protocol. The extraction and recovery behavior of Re was used to interpret the selectivity behavior of the ECRs. The Re separation factor at optimized operating conditions comparing with Mo and Ru (interfering elements during the measurement by ICP-MS) for Meta SEP AnaLig Tc-01, Meta SEP AnaLig Tc-02, and Eichrom TRU resin, respectively, are SFRe/Mo~32, 16.51, and ∞ (metal not retained at all), while SFRe/Ru~∞, 3.25, 5437. In terms of selectivity and retention capacity, MetaSEP AnaLig Tc-01 is the better choice for selective separation of Re, and, assumably so, also Tc, from the aqueous matrices.

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