Volume reduction of water samples to increase sensitivity for radioassay of lead contamination
A. Aguilar-Arevalo, C. Canet, M. A. Cruz-P\'erez, A. Deisting, A., Dias, J. C. D'Olivo, F. Favela-P\'erez, E. A. Garc\'es, A. Gonz\'alez, Mu\~noz, J. O. Guerra-Pulido, J. Mancera-Alejandrez, D. J., Mar\'in-L\'ambarri, M. Martinez Montero, J. R. Monroe, S. Paling, S. J. M.

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that volume reduction of water samples can significantly increase the sensitivity of radioassay techniques for detecting lead contamination, enabling measurements closer to WHO safety limits with lower-cost detectors.
Contribution
It introduces a volume reduction method that retains most of the radioactive lead isotopes, improving detection sensitivity in low-cost radioassay devices.
Findings
Retained 99% of $^{210}$Pb after volume reduction.
Measured concentrations of lead isotopes in London tap water.
Demonstrated increased detection sensitivity near WHO limits.
Abstract
The World Health Organisation (WHO) presents an upper limit for lead in drinking water of 10 parts per billion ppb. Typically, to reach this level of sensitivity, expensive metrology is required. To increase the sensitivity of low cost devices, this paper explores the prospects of using a volume reduction technique of a boiled water sample doped with Lead-210 (), as a means to increase the solute's concentration. Pb is a radioactive lead isotope and its concentration in a water sample can be measured with e.g. High Purity Germanium (HPGe) detectors at the Boulby Underground Germanium Suite. Concentrations close to the WHO limit have not been examined. This paper presents a measurement of the volume reduction technique retaining of Pb starting from a concentration of ppb before reduction and resulting in ppb…
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