Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Khalil J. Spencer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Khalil J. Spencer.


Analytical Methods | 2016

Critical need for plutonium and uranium isotopic standards with lower uncertainties

K. J. Mathew; Floyd E. Stanley; Mariam R. Thomas; Khalil J. Spencer; Lisa Michelle Colletti; Lav Tandon

Certified reference materials (CRMs) traceable to national and international safeguards database are a critical prerequisite for ensuring that nuclear measurement systems are free of systematic biases. CRMs are used to validate measurement processes associated with nuclear analytical laboratories. Diverse areas related to nuclear safeguards are impacted by the quality of the CRM standards available to analytical laboratories. These include: nuclear forensics, radio-chronometry, national and international safeguards, stockpile stewardship, nuclear weapons infrastructure and nonproliferation, fuel fabrication, waste processing, radiation protection, and environmental monitoring. For the past three decades the nuclear community is confronted with the strange situation that improvements in measurement data quality resulting from the improved accuracy and precision achievable with modern multi-collector mass spectrometers could not be fully exploited due to large uncertainties associated with CRMs available from New Brunswick Laboratory (NBL) that are used for instrument calibration and measurement control. Similar conditions prevail for both plutonium and uranium isotopic standards and for impurity element standards in uranium matrices. Herein, the current status of U and Pu isotopic standards available from NBL is reviewed. Critical areas requiring improvement in the quality of the nuclear standards to enable the U. S. and international safeguards community to utilize the full potential of modern multi-collector mass spectrometer instruments are highlighted.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2017

Pursuing standards strategies in nuclear forensics: investigating extraction of progeny uranium in CRM-126a as a quality control material in Pu–U chronometry

Floyd E. Stanley; K. J. Mathew; Benjamin Byerly; Russell C. Keller; Khalil J. Spencer; Mariam R. Thomas

Parent–progeny isotope relationships provide critical signatures in forensic efforts designed to determine the history of interdicted nuclear materials. Unfortunately, there is substantial need for new standards and QC strategies yielding confidence in such chronometric measurements. Here, we investigate the initial isolation of progeny uranium in certified reference material-126a for use as a precision comparator in a thermal ionization mass spectrometry-based QC strategy seeking to provide improved uncertainties in isotopic and chronometric measurements for nuclear materials containing elevated U-236, such as plutonium. Application to real-world Pu either preserved or improved upon uncertainties associated with key parent–daughter ratios and further constrained associated chronometric windows.


Talanta | 2016

Nuclear forensic analysis of a non-traditional actinide sample

Jamie Doyle; Kevin Kuhn; Benjamin Byerly; Lisa Michelle Colletti; James Brent Fulwyler; Katherine Garduno; Russell C. Keller; Elmer J. W. Lujan; Alexander Martinez; Steve Charles Myers; Donivan R. Porterfield; Khalil J. Spencer; Floyd E. Stanley; Lisa Townsend; Mariam R. Thomas; Laurie Walker; Ning Xu; Lav Tandon

Nuclear forensic publications, performance tests, and research and development efforts typically target the bulk global inventory of intentionally safeguarded materials, such as plutonium (Pu) and uranium (U). Other materials, such as neptunium (Np), pose a nuclear security risk as well. Trafficking leading to recovery of an interdicted Np sample is a realistic concern especially for materials originating in countries that reprocesses fuel. Using complementary forensic methods, potential signatures for an unknown Np oxide sample were investigated. Measurement results were assessed against published Np processes to present hypotheses as to the original intended use, method of production, and origin for this Np oxide.


Archive | 2015

Analytical Chemistry Developmental Work Using a 243Am Solution

Khalil J. Spencer; Floyd E. Stanley; Donivan R. Porterfield; Alonso Castro

This project seeks to reestablish our analytical capability to characterize Am bulk material and develop a reference material suitable to characterizing the purity and assay of 241Am oxide for industrial use. The tasks associated with this phase of the project included conducting initial separations experiments, developing thermal ionization mass spectrometry capability using the 243Am isotope as an isotope dilution spike , optimizing the spike for the determination of 241Pu-241 Am radiochemistry, and, additionally, developing and testing a methodology which can detect trace to ultra- trace levels of Pu (both assay and isotopics) in bulk Am samples .


Archive | 2015

Analytical Chemistry and Materials Characterization Results for Debris Recovered from Nitrate Salt Waste Drum S855793

Patrick Thomas Martinez; Rebecca M. Chamberlin; Daniel S. Schwartz; Christopher G. Worley; Katherine Garduno; Elmer J. W. Lujan; Andres Patricio Borrego; Alonso Castro; Lisa Michelle Colletti; James Brent Fulwyler; Charlotte S. Holland; Russell C. Keller; Dylan James Klundt; Alexander Martinez; Frances Louise Martin; Dennis Patrick Montoya; Steven C. Myers; Donivan R. Porterfield; Ann Rene Schake; Michael Francis Schappert; Constance B. Soderberg; Khalil J. Spencer; Floyd E. Stanley; Mariam R. Thomas; Lisa Townsend; Ning Xu

Solid debris was recovered from the previously-emptied nitrate salt waste drum S855793. The bulk sample was nondestructively assayed for radionuclides in its as-received condition. Three monoliths were selected for further characterization. Two of the monoliths, designated Specimen 1 and 3, consisted primarily of sodium nitrate and lead nitrate, with smaller amounts of lead nitrate oxalate and lead oxide by powder x-ray diffraction. The third monolith, Specimen 2, had a complex composition; lead carbonate was identified as the predominant component, and smaller amounts of nitrate, nitrite and carbonate salts of lead, magnesium and sodium were also identified. Microfocused x-ray fluorescence (MXRF) mapping showed that lead was ubiquitous throughout the cross-sections of Specimens 1 and 2, while heteroelements such as potassium, calcium, chromium, iron, and nickel were found in localized deposits. MXRF examination and destructive analysis of fragments of Specimen 3 showed elevated concentrations of iron, which were broadly distributed through the sample. With the exception of its high iron content and low carbon content, the chemical composition of Specimen 3 was within the ranges of values previously observed in four other nitrate salt samples recovered from emptied waste drums.


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2008

Nuclear, chemical, and physical characterization of nuclear materials

Lav Tandon; E. P. Hastings; Joseph P. Banar; J. W. Barnes; David H. Beddingfield; Diana L. Decker; J. Dyke; D. Farr; J. FitzPatrick; D. Gallimore; S.E. Garner; R. Gritzo; T. Hahn; G. Havrilla; B. Johnson; Kevin Kuhn; S. P. LaMont; D. Langner; C. Lewis; V. Majidi; Patrick Thomas Martinez; Rodney J. McCabe; S. Mecklenburg; David James Mercer; S. Meyers; V. Montoya; B. Patterson; Ramiro A. Pereyra; Donivan R. Porterfield; J. Poths


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2009

Refinement of Pu parent–daughter isotopic and concentration analysis for forensic (dating) purposes

Khalil J. Spencer; Lav Tandon; Dave Gallimore; Ning Xu; Kevin Kuhn; Laurie Walker; Lisa Townsend


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2017

Enhanced ionization efficiency in TIMS analyses of plutonium and americium using porous ion emitters

Matthew L. Baruzzini; Howard L. Hall; Matthew G. Watrous; Khalil J. Spencer; Floyd E. Stanley


Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2009

Establishing reactor operations from uranium targets used for the production of plutonium

Lav Tandon; Kevin Kuhn; Patrick Thomas Martinez; Joseph P. Banar; Laurie Walker; Terry Hahn; David H. Beddingfield; Donivan R. Porterfield; Steven C. Myers; S. P. LaMont; Daniel S. Schwartz; D. Gallimore; S.E. Garner; Khalil J. Spencer; Lisa Townsend; Heather M. Volz; Russ Gritzo; Rodney J. McCabe; Ramiro A. Pereyra; Dominic S. Peterson; Mark R Scott; Christy E. Ruggiero; Diana L. Decker; Amy S. Wong


Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2016

Static, Mixed-Array Total Evaporation for Improved Quantitation of Plutonium Minor Isotopes in Small Samples.

Floyd E. Stanley; Benjamin Byerly; Mariam R. Thomas; Khalil J. Spencer

Collaboration


Dive into the Khalil J. Spencer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Floyd E. Stanley

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lav Tandon

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Donivan R. Porterfield

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mariam R. Thomas

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ning Xu

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Thomas Martinez

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kevin Kuhn

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven C. Myers

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lisa Townsend

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Russell C. Keller

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge