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SIMULTANEOUSLY MEASURING 14C AND RADON IN BENZENE DATING SAMPLES

Pall Theodrsson

Abstract


After benzene synthesis, radiocarbon dating samples are usually stored for 34 weeks before counting to allow

an eventual radon contamination to decay to a negligible level. This paper presents a technique that can minimize, and often

eliminate, this delay by using a simple single-phototube liquid scintillation counting system, specifically designed for 14C

dating. Radon contamination is assessed by pulses of 214Po (a 222Rn decay product, half-life 0.16 s), identified through

pulse-time analysis. For each 214Po pulse, 0.49 beta particle pulses of 214Pb and 214Bi fall in the 14C counting window, and the

214Po pulses are used to correct the 14C count rate. A 14C sample (count rate 11.6 cpm) was measured continuously for 16 days.

It was then doped with radon, which increased the first 24-hr count rate in the 14C channel by 3.8 cpm, and the sample was

measured for 27 more days. Radon did not measurably affect the 14C-corrected count rate. Counting a sample for 2 min

reveals whether it needs storing. If the radon concentration is low, the sample can be measured immediately without degrading

accuracy.

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