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Radioactivity Group

The Radioactivity Group's mission is to develop, maintain, and disseminate radioactivity standards, develop and apply radioactivity measurement techniques, and engage in research to meet the requirements for new standards.

The principal mission of the Radioactivity Group is to realize and disseminate the Système International (SI) unit for activity, the becquerel (Bq). We support stakeholders in government, industry, and academia with standards and calibrations essential to applications in security, environmental monitoring, medicine, and basic scientific research.

We lead the National effort, in collaboration with the Department of Homeland Security, to develop standards and protocols for radiation instrumentation for early and emergency responders. We developed and administer the National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (NVLAP) for instrument testing. Our scientists also spearhead the development of ANSI standards and testing protocols for spectroscopic portal monitors, neutron detectors, x-ray and high energy gamma-ray interrogation methods, x-ray imaging, data formats for instrumentation data output, and training standards for responders.

The Radioactivity Group’s nuclear medicine program provides the National standards for radionuclides used in 13 million diagnostic procedures and 200,000 therapeutic nuclear medicine procedures annually in the US. Traceability to our standards has defined quantitative imaging endpoints for large multi-center clinical trials. Our standards enable precision medicine by defining accuracy in clinical administrations of radiopharmaceuticals, improving patient safety, and allowing absolute personalized dosimetry.

The Radioactivity Group's environmental program develops and disseminates reference materials for low-level and natural matrix radioactivity measurements. We are heavily involved in international comparisons and have supported international responses to high-impact events such as the Fukushima-Daiichi disaster.

Our work in basic radionuclide metrology is at the core of our programs. Our researchers are recognized internationally as leaders in the development and application of liquid scintillation counting techniques, coincidence counting techniques, and emerging methods involving cryogenic calorimetry. Regular participation in international comparisons and submissions to the International Reference System (SIR) demonstrates the equivalence of NIST standards with those of other metrology institutes. Our scientists further engage in the critical work of nuclear decay data acquisition and evaluation.

News and Updates

Spotlight: Radiometric Dating

Dating can be complicated. Our team uses this instrument — a live-timed anticoincidence counter — to figure the decay rate of an isotope, which we can then use

Projects and Programs

Basic Metrology: Comparison of NIST-1 and NIST-3 Standard Ampoules

Ongoing
Exhaustive comparisons of the NIST-1 and NIST-3 ampoules are underway. Ion chamber evaluations have been completed for 99Mo, 133Ba, 241Am, 201Tl, and 67Ga. HPGe gamma-ray spectrometry evaluations have been completed for 99Mo, 133Ba, 241Am, 201Tl, and 67Ga. Many more evaluations are in the design /

Basic Metrology: Gas Counting

Ongoing
Gas-filled detectors operate by measuring electrical current produced by radioactive particles interacting with an inert counting gas inside a volume. Depending on the applied voltage in the detector, different multiplication factors are achieved, which are used by specialized instruments such as

Basic Metrology: NIST-3 Standard Ampoules and Automatic Tip Sealing

Ongoing
Report NISTIR 8254 referenced above was intended to document and archive the historical record for the acquisition and testing of standardized ampoules used by the NIST / NBS Radioactivity Group since the 1950s. These ampoules were intended to contain 5 mL of solutions of radionuclides decaying with

Publications

A bilateral comparison of 227Th activity standards between NPL and NIST

Author(s)
Andrew Fenwick, Denis Bergeron, Brittany Broder, Emma Bendall, Jeffrey Cessna, Sean Collins, Leticia Pibida, Natasha Ramirez, Elisa Napoli
The National Physical Laboratory (United Kingdom) and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (United States) each determined the massic activity and

Tools and Instruments

Cryogenic Decay Energy Spectrometry

Cryogenic detectors provide some of the highest energy resolution spectra available, due to their intrinsic low thermal noise. The NIST cryogenic decay energy

Awards

Press Coverage

Contacts

Group Leader

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