Quantitative analysis of radium-226 at the microscale by NanoSIMS
Abstract
This study presents an analytical protocol for the quantitative imaging of 226Ra by Nanoscale Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (NanoSIMS), based on the synthesis and characterization of barite reference materials enriched in 226Ra (2.89 and 9.65 µg g−1), 232Th (2120 µg g−1), and Pb (85, 755 and 8080 µg g−1). This methodological development addresses key analytical challenges related to the low abundance of 226Ra and spectral interferences. We identified 88Sr138Ba+ and 208Pb18O+ as potential polyatomic interferences for 226Ra+. However, we demonstrated that these species do not significantly impact the 226Ra+ signal when appropriate mass resolution and precise peak alignment are applied. Thanks to the use of homemade 226Ra–barite reference materials, we demonstrated that NanoSIMS measurements can achieve reproducibility ranging from 6% to 12% (2σ) across analytical sessions, depending on the Ra content and the size of the analyzed area. Comparison with known concentrations confirmed the accuracy of the 226Ra+/138Ba+ ratio as a quantitative proxy for radium barite content. A conservative quantification limit achieved for 226Ra is 0.135 µg g−1, making this approach applicable to samples from the natural environment. These results demonstrate that NanoSIMS provides accurate and reproducible quantitative imaging of 226Ra at the micrometric scale using matrix-matched internal reference materials. This method opens up new opportunities for studying 226Ra distribution in samples from the natural environment at the mineral scale.

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