Undergraduate Research and Training in Ion-Beam Analysis of Environmental Materials

Publication date: 2017 Source:Physics Procedia, Volume 90 Author(s): Michael F. Vineyard, Sajju Chalise, Morgan L. Clark, Scott M. LaBrake, Andrew M. McCalmont, Brendan C. McGuire, Iseinie I. Mendez, Heather C. Watson, Joshua T. Yoskowitz We have an active undergraduate research program at the Union College Ion-Beam Analysis Laboratory (UCIBAL) focused on the study of environmental materials. Accelerator-based ion-beam analysis (IBA) is a powerful tool for the study of environmental pollution because it can provide information on a broad range of elements with high sensitivity and low detection limits, is non-destructive, and requires little or no sample preparation. It also provides excellent training for the next generation of environmental scientists. Beams of protons and alpha particles with energies of a few MeV from the 1.1-MV tandem Pelletron accelerator (NEC Model 3SDH) in the UCIBAL are used to characterize environmental samples using IBA techniques such as proton-induced X-ray emission, Rutherford back-scattering, and proton-induced gamma-ray emission. Recent projects include the characterization of atmospheric aerosols in the Adirondack Mountains of upstate New York, the study of heavy metal pollutants in river sediment, measurements of Pb diffusion in sulfide minerals to help constrain the determination of the age of iron meteorites, and the search for heavy metals and toxins in artificial turf.
Source: Physics Procedia - Category: Physics Source Type: research