Synthesis and characterization of isotopically barcoded nickel, molybdenum, and tungsten taggants for intentional nuclear forensics

  • Rachel Bergin
  • , Kyle Samperton
  • , Michael Bronikowski
  • , Eric Hoar
  • , John Rolison
  • , Quinn Shollenberger
  • , Naomi Marks
  • , Matthew Wellons
  • , Spencer Scott

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Intentional nuclear forensics is a concept wherein the deliberate addition of benign and persistent material signatures to nuclear material can be used to reduce the time between the discovery of material outside of regulatory control and determination of its original provenance. One concept within intentional nuclear forensics involves the use of perturbed stable isotopes to generate unique isotope ratio “barcodes” to encode information (e.g., production batch, location, etc.) and track material throughout the nuclear fuel cycle. Synthesis of taggant species of nickel (Ni), molybdenum (Mo), and tungsten (W) was undertaken via a double-spike mechanism, wherein two highly enriched isotopes of interest per elemental taggant were mixed to form an enriched “double-spike” which was subsequently isotopically diluted with bulk material having a natural isotopic composition. Two taggant species perturbing isotopic ratios, alpha (α) and beta (β), for each of Ni, Mo, and W were synthesized. Independent measurements of double spikes and alpha and beta taggant species agreed within uncertainty and are clearly resolvable from natural compositions. High-precision analyses were independently performed by MC-ICP-MS at two U.S. National Laboratories, with consensus values and uncertainties calculated for all samples. Observed isotopic perturbations in the final taggant species measured on the order of hundreds to thousands of permille (‰) with respect to natural for isotope ratios of interest (e.g., 60Ni/58Ni, 100Mo/98Mo, 186 W/183W). Discrepancies between modeled and measured isotopic compositions were observed and are largely attributed to imprecise vendor assay values for starting materials. Using measured starting material compositions as inputs for the mixing model improved the level of agreement between predicted and measured α and β taggant isotope ratios. Overall, characterization of all taggant species demonstrates that this “barcode” concept could have viability for use in nuclear forensics. It is expected that for any two-isotope mixing array dozens of isotopic barcodes could be encoded into a material system and subsequently resolved utilizing modern mass spectrometric methods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number127425
JournalTalanta
Volume285
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 1 2025
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was produced by Savannah River National Laboratory (Battelle Savannah River Alliance, LLC) under Contracts No. 89303321CEM000080 with the U.S. Department of Energy. This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344. This work was conducted as a part of the National Nuclear Security Administration Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Research and Development (NNSA DNN R&D) Intentional Forensics Venture (LA21-V-IntentionalForensics-NTNF1Bb). Publisher acknowledges the U.S. Government license to provide public access under the DOE Public Access Plan ( http://energy.gov/downloads/doe-public-access-plan ). We thank Eva Baransky and Laura Wasylenki for graciously sharing an aliquot of NIST SRM 986. This work was produced by Savannah River National Laboratory (Battelle Savannah River Alliance, LLC) under Contracts No. 89303321CEM000080 with the U.S. Department of Energy. This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344. This work was conducted as a part of the National Nuclear Security Administration Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Research and Development (NNSA DNN R&D) Intentional Forensics Venture (LA21-V-IntentionalForensics-NTNF1Bb).

Keywords

  • Mass spectrometry
  • Molybdenum isotopes
  • Nickel isotopes
  • Nuclear forensics
  • Taggants
  • Tungsten isotopes

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