PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

23
PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19

Transcript of PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

Page 1: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

PHYSICS 225, 2ND YEAR LAB

NUCLEAR

RADIATION DETECTORS

G.F. West

Thurs, Jan. 19

Page 2: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

INTRODUCTION, -1 “Radiation” here refers to ionizing

radiation such as α, β, γ nuclear emanations, not low energy electromagnetic (photonic) radiation.

Typically arising from spontaneous or stimulated nuclear decay, e.g., neutron, γ or X-ray irradiation of atoms.

Kinetic energy (non rest mass component) >> 10 eV , typically > 1 keV.

But not HEP energies > 100MeV.

Page 3: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

INTRODUCTION, - 2

EM SPECTRUM

Page 4: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

INTRO - 3

EM spectrum

with

photon energies

Page 5: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

INTRODUCTION, - 4

X and γ rays are pure EM radiation of sufficiently high energy that they exhibit particle-like behaviour.

α, (He nucleii), β, (electrons), β+, (positrons) radiation are massive particles. Obviously, they behave differently, but they may often be detected by similar methods.

Other emissions in this energy range, (e.g., neutrons) need separate discussion.

Page 6: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

WHAT IS A PARTICLE DETECTOR ?

1. An apparatus to detect a radiation flux, usually as a stream of separate events;

2. i.e., by counting the individual particles as they pass through a defined aperture.

3. Thus, the particle must interact with the detector and deposit some, or all, of its energy into it.

4. The detector can therefore be thought of as a target body, having a cross-section (a probability) for interaction with the radiation.

5. Some radiation may go through the detector without significant interaction, some may interact and be absorbed or altered and thereby detected.

Page 7: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

PARTICLE DETECTORS , continued

Possible functions:- Simple detection (counting), Energy measurement (spectroscopy), Path tracking.

Basic types:- Ionization chamber Scintillation detector Solid state electronic detector Track imager

Page 8: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

INTERACTION PHYSICS

Effect of an incoming γ ray Photoelectric Effect (PE) - knocks out an

electron (and may continue on to another event).

Pair Production (PP) - converts to electron-positron pair.

Compton scattering (C) - elastic collisions with free electrons (partial energy absorption in each collision).

I = Io exp(-µx), where µ = µPE + µPP + µC

& µPE ~ Z5, µPP ~ Z2, µC ~  Z .

Page 9: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

IONIZATION CHAMBERSDosimeter, proportional counter, geiger counter

Chamber filled with gas or insulating liquid. Some of the radiation produces ion-electron

pairs in the medium. Most passes through unaffected.

A voltage gradient is established in the gas, usually by applying a few hundred volts between a central wire and an outer cylindrical conductor. These electrodes collect any charges produced in the medium.

Page 10: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

IONIZATION CHAMBER Voltage dependence

Page 11: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

DOSIMETER

Page 12: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

USES OF IONIZATION CHAMBERS

Dosimetry (safety and radiation therapy) Proportional and geiger counters for α, β

counting, where sample can be in the chamber, or outside next to an ultra thin window.

Particle tracking chambers.

Page 13: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

SCINTILLATION DETECTORS

Much larger capture cross section due to use of solid target volume.

Particle-target interaction produces ions and ions give off optical flashes when the ions return to ground state.

Captured optical radiation is observed with photomultiplier tube or photo diode layer.

Classic scintillator is NaI crystal doped with thallium impurity. Many others.

Page 14: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

PHOTO-MULTIPLIER (PMT)

Need for a forepump.

Page 15: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

NaI SCINTILLATOR

Page 16: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

ABSORPTION IN DETECTOR

Page 17: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

SOLID STATE DETECTORS

Use semiconductor materials, and construction techniques.

Faster and much more precise energy analysis.

Low capture cross-section. Most need liquid nitrogen cooling.

Page 18: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

SOLID STATE DETECTORS, - 3

Note logarithmic count scales on both graphs

Page 19: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

SOLID STATE DETECTORS - 2

Page 20: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

TRACKING METHODSUsually used with magnetic field for path analysis

Wilson cloud chamber (historical)

Bubble chambers

Wire ion chambers

Spark chambers

Page 21: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

TRACKING METHODS

Bubble chamber

Page 22: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

TRACKING METHODS

Wire chambers (spark, or ionization)

Page 23: PHYSICS 225, 2 ND YEAR LAB NUCLEAR RADIATION DETECTORS G.F. West Thurs, Jan. 19.

DOSIMETRY Quantities and Units

Quantity Activity of a source

Absorbed dose

Equivalent dose

Dimension Disintegrations / second

Deposited energy / kg

Equivalent gamma dose

Unit (old metric)

Curie= 3.7e10 Bq

Rad= 0.01 Gy

Rem= 0.01 Sv

Unit

SIU

Becquerel

(Bq) 1

gray (Gy)

Joule / kg

Sievert (Sv) eqJ/kg