Issue 5, 2014

Enhancement of intensity in microwave-assisted laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy for remote analysis of nuclear fuel recycling

Abstract

An enhancement of emission intensity from a laser ablation plume, obtained by coupling a pulsed microwave using a simple wire antenna, is demonstrated to compensate the sensitivity reduction of a high resolution spectrometer that is required for nuclear fuel analysis. A gadolinium oxide sample was irradiated with 2.45 GHz, 250 W microwave pulse, and passed through a loop antenna. As a result, up to 50-fold enhancement of the emission signal was achieved for gadolinium ions. The enhancement enabled us to measure the mass concentration of europium per gadolinium, ranging from 5% to 100 ppm, and based on the extrapolation of the calibration curve the detection limit for microwave-assisted laser induced breakdown spectroscopy (MA-LIBS) was estimated to be 40 ppm. This offers a flexible and compact system of MA-LIBS for nuclear fuel analysis.

Graphical abstract: Enhancement of intensity in microwave-assisted laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy for remote analysis of nuclear fuel recycling

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Aug 2013
Accepted
03 Mar 2014
First published
04 Mar 2014

J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2014,29, 886-892

Author version available

Enhancement of intensity in microwave-assisted laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy for remote analysis of nuclear fuel recycling

M. Tampo, M. Miyabe, K. Akaoka, M. Oba, H. Ohba, Y. Maruyama and I. Wakaida, J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2014, 29, 886 DOI: 10.1039/C3JA50259G

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