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COMPARATIVE FEATURES OF BINP AMS AND MICADAS FACILITIES WORKING AT AMS GOLDEN VALLEY, RUSSIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2024

A V Petrozhitskiy*
Affiliation:
Novosibirsk State University, AMS Golden Valley, 2 Pirogova str., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences (BINP SB RAS), 11 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS), 17 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
E V Parkhomchuk
Affiliation:
Novosibirsk State University, AMS Golden Valley, 2 Pirogova str., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS), 17 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (BIC SB RAS), 5 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
M M Ignatov
Affiliation:
Novosibirsk State University, AMS Golden Valley, 2 Pirogova str., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS), 17 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
D V Kuleshov
Affiliation:
Novosibirsk State University, AMS Golden Valley, 2 Pirogova str., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS), 17 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
L A Kutnyakova
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS), 17 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
E S Konstantinov
Affiliation:
Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences (BINP SB RAS), 11 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
V V Parkhomchuk
Affiliation:
Novosibirsk State University, AMS Golden Valley, 2 Pirogova str., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences (BINP SB RAS), 11 Acad. Lavrentiev Ave., Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

The AMS Golden Valley radiocarbon analysis laboratory is equipped with two accelerator mass spectrometers: AMS facility from Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics (BINP AMS) and MIni CArbon DAting System (MICADAS-28) from Ionplus AG and two graphitization systems: Automated Graphitization Equipment (AGE-3) from Ionplus AG and Absorption-catalytic setup developed in Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (ACS BIC). The laboratory provides routine 14C analyses of various samples: collagen, cellulose, humic acids, carbonates from sediments, etc. The main focus of the laboratory is to determine the age of archaeological artifacts by radiocarbon dating. This work presents a comprehensive description of the BINP AMS facility, with its operation compared with that of MICADAS in the same laboratory. In 2022, the AMS Golden Valley laboratory participated for the first time in the Glasgow International Radiocarbon Inter-comparison (GIRI). The samples were graphitized on the AGE-3 and subsequently measured in both AMS facilities. A comparison of the results of the two series of experiments, namely AGE-3 + MICADAS-28 and AGE-3 + BINP AMS, is given.

Type
Conference Paper
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona

INTRODUCTION

BINP AMS facility started routine operation in 2011. Until 2019, BINP AMS remained the only AMS in Russia. At that time, the throughput capacity of BINP AMS was about 1000 samples per year and was not sufficient to meet the needs of numerous national scientific institutes. Therefore, in December 2019, a new AMS facility MICADAS (Synal et al. Reference Synal, Stocker and Suter2007) with AGE-3 graphitization system (Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Nemec and Bourquin2010) was installed at Novosibirsk State University. A joint radiocarbon AMS laboratory was established in May 2020 by agreement between four scientific organizations of the Novosibirsk Scientific Center: Novosibirsk State University (NSU), Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics Siberian Branch Russian Academy of Sciences (BINP SB RAS), Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (BIC SB RAS), Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography (IAET SB RAS). The laboratory is registered in Radiocarbon as the AMS Golden Valley radiocarbon laboratory (short index GV). This name was chosen according to the location of the laboratory in Akademgorodok, Novosibirsk, Russia. The Golden Valley laboratory is currently equipped with two AMS facilities, MICADAS-28 and BINP AMS, and two graphitization systems, AGE-3 and Absorption-catalytic setup developed in Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (ACS BIC) (Lysikov et al. Reference Lysikov, Kalinkin, Sashkina, Okunev, Parkhomchuk, Rastigeev, Parkhomchuk, Kuleshov, Vorobyeva and Dralyuk2018). The laboratory performs routine 14C analyses of various samples: collagen, cellulose, humic acids, carbonates from sediments, etc. The main focus of the laboratory is to determine the age of archaeological artifacts by radiocarbon dating.

MICADAS-28 Operation in the AMS Golden Valley Laboratory

The MICADAS accelerator mass spectrometer was specifically designed and intended for routine radiocarbon analysis. The reader is referred to (Synal et al. Reference Synal, Stocker and Suter2007) for a detailed description of the MICADAS design. MICADAS-28 with a fixed permanent magnet (“green” one) was commissioned at the AMS Golden Valley laboratory in December 2019. Between 2020 and 2021, several serious MICADAS-28 incidents occurred due to different factors, including pandemics, sudden changes in indoor temperature and humidity, and insufficient quality of electric power supply. For the safe routine operation of MICADAS and AGE-3, a stable power supply system was designed and installed using a double conversion type (online) UPS unit and a backup diesel generator. Routine sample measurements started in February 2022. By the end of 2022, approximately 1000 samples were measured on MICADAS-28.

BINP AMS Features

BINP AMS incorporating the original design was commissioned in 2011 and by the end of 2022, about 5000 cathodes were measured (Parkhomchuk et al. Reference Parkhomchuk, Gulevich, Taratayko, Baklanov, Selivanova, Trubitsyna, Voronova, Kalinkin, Okunev, Rastigeev, Reznikov, Semeykina, Sashkina and Parkhomchuk2016; Molodin et al. Reference Molodin, Nenakhov, Mylnikova, Reinhold, Parkhomchuk, Kalinkin, Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2019; Nazarov et al. Reference Nazarov, Kruzhalov, Vasyanovich, Ekidin, Kukarskikh, Parkhomchuk, Petrozhitsky and Parkhomchuk2022; Shnaider et al. Reference Shnaider, Zhilich, Zotkina, Boxleitner, Taylor, Sayfullaev, Koval, Baranova, Chernonosov, Kutnyakova, Tonasso-Calviere, Orlando and Spengler2023). BINP AMS has several features distinguishing it from other similar facilities (Klyuev et al. Reference Klyuev, Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2009; Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev Reference Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2009, Reference Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2011). The BINP AMS layout is shown in Figure 1. The comparison of the main parameters of MICADAS and BINP AMS is given in Table 1. The main features of BINP AMS are the following: 180º electrostatic bend in the middle of tandem accelerator, vertical installation of the accelerating tubes, and Mg vapor stripping canal (Klyuev et al. Reference Klyuev, Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2009).

Figure 1 BINP AMS layout: 1—negative ion source; 2—low energy magnetic spectrometer; 3—first accelerating tube; 4—Mg vapor stripping canal; 5—electrostatic 180º bend; 6—second accelerating tube; 7—high energy magnetic spectrometer; 8—time-of-flight ion detector; 9—insulating tank of the accelerator.

Table 1 Comparison of basic MICADAS and BINP AMS parameters.

The carbon ion beam in BINP AMS is produced in the classical design of the sputtering negative ion source with solid cathodes (Figure 2): 1 mm graphite sample cathodes are installed in the sample wheel (1) with 24 mounting positions. The first mounting position is for the mechanical alignment of the sample wheel, and the other 23 positions are for the cathodes. The sample wheel rotation for serial cathode change is performed by a stepper motor through a dielectric shaft (14). The heat of the sample wheel during the ion source operation is removed to the atmosphere through the copper shaft with a sliding vacuum rotation feedthrough (12) and blown away by a heat dissipation radiator (13). The cathode potential is about –25 kV relative to the ground. The body of the ion source is at the cathode potential. The ion source is equipped with a spherical ionizer (3) made of 0.5 mm thick tantalum sheet. The ionizer is heated by a filament with 17A current. The accelerating voltage of Cs ions is maintained at a constant 8 kV, even during sample changes. An insignificant sputtering of the metal gaps occurs between the cathodes, leading to slow wear of the sample wheel cover. This requires the cover to be replaced no more than once a year. The ionizer potential is –17 kV relative to the ground. The C- beam is accelerated after the ionizer by an extractor electrode (4). An electrostatic lens (5) is used to focus the beam.

Figure 2 BINP AMS ion source layout (section): 1—sample wheel; 2—diaphragm; 3—ionizer; 4—extractor electrode; 5—electrostatic lens; 6—Cs vapor feedline; 7—Cs ampoule container; 8—ampoule cracker; 9—Cs heater and heat insulation; 10—Cs vapor feedline heater and heat insulation; 11—ionizer mounting shielded ceramic rod; 12—copper shaft with sliding vacuum rotation feedthrough; 13—heat dissipation radiator; 14—dielectric shaft; 15—stepper motor coupling; 16—stepper motor; 17—dielectric base.

A negative feature of this ion source is the absence of a gate valve or vacuum lock for the sample wheel change without breaking the vacuum inside the ion source. This feature makes the ion source operation extremely difficult. In particular, when installing a sample wheel with fresh samples, it is necessary also to install a new batch of Cs glass ampoules. We usually install 6 ampoules of 15 mg each. This is followed by a 10–12 hours vacuum pumping and degassing period of the ion source. During the degassing process, the ionizer heating current is gradually increased to the nominal value and ion source HV potentials are applied. Only then can the Cs glass ampoules be crushed. Typical 12C LE currents are 10–15 µA C- during the measurement.

After the ion source, the C- beam enters the low-energy magnetic spectrometer (LE magnet), a 90° electromagnet with 500 mm turning radius and a magnetic field decay factor of 0.5. Unfortunately, the vacuum chamber of the LE magnet is not electrically isolated from the ground potential. Thus, the sequential injection of 14C and 13C beams into the accelerator is performed by switching the cathode potential in the ion source: –22.8 kV and –24.5 kV for 14C and 13C, respectively. Changing the beam energy subsequently leads to the need for high-voltage switching of the following five optical elements: ion source electrostatic lens, LE magnet Y stirrer, electrostatic lens at the input of the first accelerating tube, 180° electrostatic bend, and Y stirrer at the input of the second accelerating tube.

After the LE magnet, the beam goes through the first accelerating tube to a terminal voltage of +1 MV. Accelerating tubes are relatively long, with a length of 2 m. The acceleration rate is only 0.5 MeV/m. The 12C beam current is not injected into the accelerating tube, and the remaining currents 13C and 14C are too small to cause vacuum sparks, indicating no need to suppress secondary electrons. As a result, BINP AMS tandem accelerator has no problems with electric strength on the vacuum side. The accelerator voltage is provided by the cascade HV multiplier with serial capacitive coupling, which is limited to +1 MV due to the design features.

After acceleration, the beam enters the charge exchange canal. The BINP AMS uses a magnesium vapor canal (Kluev et al. Reference Klyuev, Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2009). Other AMS facilities typically use a gas canal with recirculation. The use of magnesium has several advantages: Mg vapor condenses on cold surfaces and does not worsen the vacuum in the accelerator. This allowed us to get rid of the gas recirculation system and simplify the design of the HV terminal. Improving the vacuum in the accelerating tubes reduces 14C background. The nominal stripper operating temperature is 540–590°C. The stripping efficiency of carbon ions to charge state +3 together with optical transmission gives a total transmission of approximately 20%. The stripper canal is a stainless steel tube with 6 mm inner diameter and 300 mm length. The Mg reservoir is coaxial to the canal. Mg vapor flows out from the reservoir in the middle of the canal through 4 holes with 1 mm diameter. A copper temperature equalizer is put over the Mg reservoir so that the temperature at the edges and in the center of the target is the same. Heating is accomplished by a filament in ceramic insulation. The temperature control is provided by three thermocouples. Vacuum heat shields are used to keep the heat. The nominal power consumption to maintain the Mg temperature is about 50 W. The Mg load is a 200 g cylinder with an outer diameter of 23 mm, wall thickness of 5 mm, and length of 300 mm. These parameters are sufficient for about 2 years of BINP AMS operation. Diaphragms are installed at the inlet and outlet of the target to reduce Mg flow into the accelerator. No electrical strength decrease was observed inside the first accelerating tube during the entire period of the BINP AMS operation.

Immediately after the charge exchange, the beam is filtered with 180° electrostatic bend. The +3 charge state is selected. The dissociated 12CH2 3+ and 13CH3+ molecular fragments are completely eliminated before the second accelerating tube due to the incorrect energy-to-charge ratio (Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev Reference Parkhomchuk and Rastigeev2009).

After the electrostatic bend of 180°, the beam is accelerated to the ground potential in the second accelerator up to the energy of 4.025 MeV. Both accelerating tubes have a vertical installation. Together with a high-voltage cascade generator, they form an accelerating column. Located at the top of the column is a high-voltage terminal with a charge-exchange canal, 180° electrostatic bend,of and four pairs X-Y stirrers. The BINP AMS tandem accelerator is put inside the insulating tank with an outer diameter of 3.2 m, a height of 4.6 m, and a volume of 31.2 m3. The electrical insulation of the HV terminal is provided by a mixture of 1.6 bar (abs) nitrogen and 0.05 bar sulfur hexafluoride (SF6).

After the tandem accelerator, the beam is finally filtered in a high-energy magnetic spectrometer, and the 13C current is measured by an off-axis Faraday cup to normalize the 14C count. BINP AMS uses a time-of-flight (TOF) type final detector. It has two flight intervals of 0.3 m and a 0.5 ns time resolution. The TOF detector is capable of additional separation of 12C and 13C background ions.

Beam diagnostics is a weak point of the BINP AMS. There is only an off-axis 13C Faraday cup, and beam optimization is provided by maximizing 13C current and 14C count. It is the ion source and beam diagnostics that is currently being developed in BINP AMS.

A comparison of the main design features of the two AMS facilities made it possible to reveal the importance of several features that significantly increase the performance of work on the MICADAS relative to the BINP AMS. These are a high degree of automation that greatly simplifies tuning of the facility; a negative ion source with high operation 12C LE current that increases the statistical accuracy of measurements; a vacuum lock with separate pumping system and pneumatically driven vacuum gates that reduces the changing downtime of the samples. Thus, in order to achieve high performance of 14C measurement together with high accuracy, any AMS facility must have all of the features listed above.

GIRI Test in AMS Golden Valley Laboratory

The AMS Golden Valley radiocarbon analysis laboratory participated in radiocarbon intercomparison for the first time. To check all possible toolkits during the Glasgow International Radiocarbon Intercomparison, we conducted three series of experiments: (1) AGE-3 + MICADAS-28, (2) ACS + MICADAS-28, and (3) AGE-3 +BINP AMS, with the maximum possible number of samples. Here the results on AMS-dating of the first and third series are presented. Sample preparation is described in detail in Parkhomchuk et al. (Reference Parkhomchuk, Petrozhitskiy, Ignatov, Kuleshov, Lysikov, Okunev, Babina and Parkhomchukforthcoming) in this conference proceedings.

AMS-measurements for all graphite targets were made following our routine measurement sequence on MICADAS and BINP AMS. ОX-I (SRM 4990B) was used as a modern standard material, and Polyethylene STD (BN 268530 Thermo Scientific) was used as a background reference material. The results from MICADAS-28 were analyzed using the BATS, the data reduction software, that is provided with MICADAS. Since this was the first time we went through the intercomparison and, in order to avoid accidental sample confusion, we prepared two or even more graphite probes from most samples if there was enough material. F14C and radiocarbon age measurements from both AMSs were compared with each other and with preliminary consensus GIRI-results (Scott et al. Reference Scott, Naysmith and Eforthcoming), and the statistical significance was below 0.05 for samples O and Q measured on BINP AMS, with the other samples having no or minor differences according to the t-test results (see supplementary materials).

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Table 2 presents the results of GIRI samples graphitized by AGE-3 and then measured on MICADAS-28 and BINP AMS. δ13C measured by MICADAS-28 for graphite targets was used to reduce the BATS data. BATS automatically calculates standard and blank corrected results for measured samples. The δ13C data obtained on MICADAS-28 for graphites was used for calculating F14C. Due to the lack of the possibility of manual input of fractionation value in BATS, δ13C = –19.3‰ for the standard OXI was used in BATS as nominal. δ13C for all samples and δ15N for the collagen was measured before graphitization by Delta-V-Advantage relative to the ANU sucrose and IVA Urea standards, respectively. δ13C and δ15N were normalized to VPDB scale and atmospheric nitrogen, respectively. δ13C data from Delta-V-Advantage was used for F14C correction for all GIRI samples, measured by BINP AMS, OXI data was corrected to δ13C = –19.3‰. It can be seen that the average value for duplicated samples measured with BINP AMS is quite consistent with MICADAS and the preliminary results of GIRI (Scott et al. Reference Scott, Naysmith and Eforthcoming). The errors of the results of the BINP AMS are larger compared with MICADAS due to the smaller statistics collected. On BINP AMS, we have systematic measurement errors, presumably related to the inaccuracy of normalization to the 13C current due to the low beam stability. The latter is due to the inaccuracy of cathode positioning in the ion source and the drift of the X-Y stirrer high-voltage power supply. This phenomenon is better seen when measuring modern or labeled samples. For example, the standard deviations calculated for F14C measurements of ANU samples on the MICADAS and on the BINP AMS are 0.0037 and 0.0676, respectively (Figure 3).

Table 2 Results of GIRI samples graphitized by AGE-3 and then measured on MICADAS-28 and BINP AMS, together with the data on δ13C measured by MICADAS-28 and Delta-V-Advantage. F = the measured fraction modern with fractionation correction applied to both the sample and standard and corrected for background. Uncertainties represent 1 sigma.

1 Taken as mean ± stdev.

2 Pretreatment not required.

3 δ15N = 12.8‰; C/N = 3.2.

4 δ15N = 12.7‰; C/N = 3.2.

5 Given as F.

Figure 3 F14C·100 for standards and blanks, graphitized on AGE-3 and measured on BINP AMS (black) and MICADAS-28 (blue): (a) Sucrose IAEA-C6 (ANU) standards, measured on BINP AMS June 2021 to July 2022, (b) Sucrose IAEA-C6 (ANU) standards, measured on MICADAS-28 April 2021 to November 2022, (c) Oxalic acid (OX-I) standards, measured on BINP AMS April 2022 for GIRI test, (d) Oxalic acid (OX-I) standards, measured on MICADAS-28 March 2022 for GIRI test, (e) Blanks MPG-6 graphite, measured on BINP AMS June 2021 to November 2021, (f) Blanks MPG-6 graphite, measured on MICADAS-28 April 2021, (g) Blanks Polyethylene STD (BN 268530 Thermo Scientific), measured on BINP AMS February 2022 to July 2022, (h) Blanks Polyethylene STD (BN 268530 Thermo Scientific), measured on MICADAS-28 March 2022 to November 2022.

Figure 3 presents the standards and blank results measured since 2021 on MICADAS-28 and BINP AMS, graphitized on AGE-3. Due to the commercial unavailability of the OXI standard, sucrose IAEA-C6 (ANU) is usually used as an internal standard for routine measurements on both MICADAS and BINP AMS, while OXI was used only for the GIRI test. The situation is similar with blank samples: we used local graphite MPG-6. It is fine-grained dense graphite made by cold pressing of graphite powder. It has higher physical and chemical parameters than those of other fine-grained analogues. After the GIRI test, the graphite blank was changed to polyethylene, which is closer to biomaterials analyzed for AMS by its chemical composition. Before launching the AGE-3 and MICADAS-28 at NSU, all the samples were graphitized by ACS and measured by BINP AMS. F14C for MPG-6 graphite as a blank graphitized during 2016–2021 is presented in Figure 4.

Figure 4 F14C·100, measured on BINP AMS, for blank (MPG-6 graphite) graphitized on ACS 2016–2021.

CONCLUSIONS

The AMS Golden Valley laboratory’s participation in radiocarbon intercomparison for the first time is reported, with all possible toolkits checked during the Glasgow International Radiocarbon Intercomparison. Results of testing two types of accelerator mass-spectrometers have been presented. MICADAS-28 favorably differs from BINP AMS with better stability of blank and standard results and higher precision due to larger counting statistics and higher level of automation. The first Russian AMS built by BINP SB RAS in 2011 has demonstrated the results comparable with ones of MICADAS-28 with enough degree of reproducibility. However, it inevitably requires further improvements in stability of power supply, ion source design, and AMS control system.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The work was presented with the financial support of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation: Priority 2030 program, The Russian Academic Excellence Project 5-100, NSU program № FSUS-2020-0036 and IAET program FWZG-2022-0007. The authors are grateful to K.A. Babina for the design of Figures 3 and 4, M.A. Kuleshova, O.V. Ershova, U.V. Sryvkina, E.V. Kuznetsova, K.K. Kuznetsova for their participation in the chemlab work, O.B. Lazarenko, V.I. Isachenko, A.D. Goncharov, V.V. Efimenko, V.F. Kluev for the AMS functioning, and S.A. Rastigeev for the starting of the AMS launch.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/RDC.2024.4

Footnotes

Selected Papers from the 24th Radiocarbon and 10th Radiocarbon & Archaeology International Conferences, Zurich, Switzerland, 11–16 Sept. 2022.

References

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Figure 0

Figure 1 BINP AMS layout: 1—negative ion source; 2—low energy magnetic spectrometer; 3—first accelerating tube; 4—Mg vapor stripping canal; 5—electrostatic 180º bend; 6—second accelerating tube; 7—high energy magnetic spectrometer; 8—time-of-flight ion detector; 9—insulating tank of the accelerator.

Figure 1

Table 1 Comparison of basic MICADAS and BINP AMS parameters.

Figure 2

Figure 2 BINP AMS ion source layout (section): 1—sample wheel; 2—diaphragm; 3—ionizer; 4—extractor electrode; 5—electrostatic lens; 6—Cs vapor feedline; 7—Cs ampoule container; 8—ampoule cracker; 9—Cs heater and heat insulation; 10—Cs vapor feedline heater and heat insulation; 11—ionizer mounting shielded ceramic rod; 12—copper shaft with sliding vacuum rotation feedthrough; 13—heat dissipation radiator; 14—dielectric shaft; 15—stepper motor coupling; 16—stepper motor; 17—dielectric base.

Figure 3

Table 2 Results of GIRI samples graphitized by AGE-3 and then measured on MICADAS-28 and BINP AMS, together with the data on δ13C measured by MICADAS-28 and Delta-V-Advantage. F = the measured fraction modern with fractionation correction applied to both the sample and standard and corrected for background. Uncertainties represent 1 sigma.

Figure 4

Figure 3 F14C·100 for standards and blanks, graphitized on AGE-3 and measured on BINP AMS (black) and MICADAS-28 (blue): (a) Sucrose IAEA-C6 (ANU) standards, measured on BINP AMS June 2021 to July 2022, (b) Sucrose IAEA-C6 (ANU) standards, measured on MICADAS-28 April 2021 to November 2022, (c) Oxalic acid (OX-I) standards, measured on BINP AMS April 2022 for GIRI test, (d) Oxalic acid (OX-I) standards, measured on MICADAS-28 March 2022 for GIRI test, (e) Blanks MPG-6 graphite, measured on BINP AMS June 2021 to November 2021, (f) Blanks MPG-6 graphite, measured on MICADAS-28 April 2021, (g) Blanks Polyethylene STD (BN 268530 Thermo Scientific), measured on BINP AMS February 2022 to July 2022, (h) Blanks Polyethylene STD (BN 268530 Thermo Scientific), measured on MICADAS-28 March 2022 to November 2022.

Figure 5

Figure 4 F14C·100, measured on BINP AMS, for blank (MPG-6 graphite) graphitized on ACS 2016–2021.

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