Tunable neutron imaging scintillator
11693135 · 2023-07-04
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Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A scintillator-based imaging screen technology that is sensitive to neutral and charged particles is disclosed. These teachings improve the temporal and spatial resolution limitations of the screens currently used in static and dynamic neutron detection and imaging, neutron tomography, and other advanced neutron imaging equipment used to study materials, such as neutron reflectometers and diffractometers.
Claims
1. A scintillator comprising an organic crystalline scintillator material and a neutron absorbing material; wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material and the neutron absorbing material are vapor deposited; the organic crystalline scintillator material being deposited above a substrate at a predetermined temperature; the predetermined temperature selected such that a predetermined peak emission and a predetermined light yield are obtained.
2. The scintillator of claim 1 wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material is Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (C.sub.26H.sub.18).
3. The scintillator of claim 2 wherein the neutron absorbing material is one of .sup.6Li, .sup.10B, .sup.157Gd or .sup.155Gd.
4. The scintillator of claim 1 comprising a layer of an organic crystalline scintillator material disposed on a thin layer of neutron absorbing material.
5. The scintillator of claim 4 wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material is Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (C.sub.26H.sub.18).
6. The scintillator of claim 5 wherein the predetermined temperature is selected such that to a predetermined emission distribution is obtained.
7. The scintillator of claim 4 wherein in the layer of organic crystalline scintillator material is a micro-columnar structure.
8. The scintillator of claim 4 further comprising: a second thin layer of neutron absorbing material disposed on the layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material; and a second layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material disposed on the second thin layer of neutron absorbing material.
9. The scintillator of claim 8 wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material is Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (C.sub.26H.sub.18).
10. The scintillator of claim 8 wherein the neutron absorbing material is one of .sup.6Li, .sup.10B, .sup.157Gd, or .sup.155Gd.
11. The scintillator of claim 8 wherein the predetermined temperature is selected such that a predetermined emission distribution is obtained.
12. The scintillator of claim 1 wherein the neutron absorbing material is incorporated in the organic crystalline scintillator material.
13. The scintillator of claim 1 further comprising: a hollow generalized cylinder having one end opened; the organic crystalline scintillator material being disposed or injected in an inside volume of the hollow generalized cylinder; the hollow generalized cylinder being comprised of an optically substantially transparent material; the optically substantially transparent material having an index of refraction smaller than an index of refraction of the organic crystalline scintillator material.
14. The scintillator of claim 13 wherein another end of the hollow generalized cylinder is closed by a surface.
15. The scintillator of claim 14 wherein a space is disposed between the organic crystalline scintillator material and an inner surface of the hollow generalized cylinder; and wherein a plastic material fills said space; the plastic material having an index of refraction smaller than the index of refraction of the organic crystalline scintillator material.
16. The scintillator of claim 14 were in a layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material is disposed on a thin layer of the neutron absorbing material.
17. The scintillator of claim 13 wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material and the neutron absorbing material are injected into the inside volume of the hollow generalized cylinder.
18. The scintillator of claim 13 wherein a layer of the neutron absorbing material is disposed at another end of the hollow generalized cylinder.
19. The scintillator of claim 18 further comprising: a second thin layer of neutron absorbing material disposed on the layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material; and a second layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material disposed on the second thin layer of neutron absorbing material.
20. The scintillator of claim 13 wherein the optically substantially transparent material comprises borosilicate.
21. The scintillator of claim 20 wherein the borosilicate comprises .sup.10B.
22. The scintillator of claim 13 wherein a layer of .sup.10B is disposed on one of an inner or outer surface of the hollow generalized cylinder.
23. The scintillator of claim 1 wherein a layer of the organic crystalline scintillator material is disposed on a thin layer of the neutron absorbing material.
24. The scintillator of claim 23 wherein in the layer of organic crystalline scintillator material is a micro-columnar structure.
25. The scintillator of claim 23 wherein the organic crystalline scintillator material is Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (C.sub.26H.sub.18).
26. The scintillator of claim 25 wherein the neutron absorbing material is one of .sup.6Li, .sup.10B, .sup.157Gd, or .sup.155Gd.
27. The scintillator of claim 25 wherein the predetermined temperature is selected such that predetermined temperature is selected such that to a predetermined emission distribution is obtained.
28. A method for tuning emission distribution from a layer of Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (C.sub.26H.sub.18), tuning comprising obtaining a predetermined peak emission and a predetermined light yield; the method comprising: selecting predetermined temperature, where DPA is to be deposited on a substrate at the predetermined temperature, such that a predetermined peak emission and a predetermined light yield are obtained; and depositing the layer of Diphenylanthracene on a substrate at the predetermined temperature.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) The following detailed description presents the currently contemplated modes of carrying out the invention. The description is not to be taken in a limiting sense, but is made merely for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of the invention.
(14) A “generalized cylinder,” as used herein, refers to a solid bounded by a closed surface (a.k.a. cylindrical surface) and two parallel planes. A “capillary,” as used herein, is a tubelike device having a small in a cross-section (such as a small diameter in a circular cross-section).
(15) Diphenylanthracene (DPA) (chemical formula C.sub.26H.sub.18) is an organic scintillator comprised of a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon. DPA has been grown, in the form of single crystals, for use in scintillators for neutron detection. (See, Edgar V. van Loef, Jarek Glodo, Urmila Shirwadkar, Natalia Zaitseva, Kanai S. Shah, Novel Organic Scintillators for Neutron Detection, 2010 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposuim & Medical Imaging Conference, 30 Oct. 6 Nov. 2010, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety and for all purposes). Purification methods have shown that the light yield of DPA can be further increased from approximately 14 k to 20 k photons/MeV.
(16) The prompt component of scintillation light from DPA is approximately 20 ns. DPA also exhibits pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) capability, which has been extremely useful in demonstrating scintillator performance by tagging neutron detections from an AmBe source.
(17) The low effective Z of DPA suppresses image noise from unwanted gamma-ray interactions because of its insensitivity to photoelectric absorption. In other words, when it comes to gamma-ray interactions, DPA is strictly sensitive to Compton scatter, whereas traditional neutron-imaging screens that use inorganic scintillators are sensitive to both photoelectric absorption and Compton scattering.
(18) The crystalline organic material of the present teachings (e.g. DPA), can be vapor deposited to form a thin film. Film thickness and properties can be tailored by varying the deposition techniques and/or by deposition parameters including the chamber pressure, the substrate temperature, the orientation of the substrate relative to the source, the rate of deposition, etc.
(19) In one embodiment, deposition process also allows incorporation of ‘foreign ions’ to be included in the composition, e.g. .sup.6Li, .sup.10B, .sup.157, .sup.155Gd etc. The films of these compounds can be deposited on top of DPA films and the process repeated to form a multi-layer structure, or the materials can be incorporated in the film through the process of co-evaporation.
(20) The scintillation spectrum is ideally situated between the wavelengths of peak sensitivity for most light sensors (blue and green). The emission spectrum ranges from 410 nm (blue) to 550 nm (green) and peaks at approximately 470 nm (teal). The present teachings show that a heat-treatment method can tune the peak emission of DPA to optimize the spectral match between the scintillator and light sensor.
(21) Micro-columnar scintillators, for materials such as CsI(Tl), have been grown, by vapor deposition, as shown in
(22) The structure of DPA is naturally crystalline. With the methodology described above, DPA can be shaped into nano/micro-sized hexagonal pillars. Densely packed hexagonal DPA pillars can be deposited onto a given substrate. DPA pillars offer a significant advantage in spatial resolution over a screen made of a single bulk DPA crystal. Similar in concept to micro-columnar cesium-iodide (CsI), a pillared-structure of DPA can help preserve the interaction location by channeling scintillation light through the pillar to the light sensor. The relatively high refractive index (n>1.7) of DPA to other organic (and even inorganic) materials suggests that scintillation light produced within a pillar of DPA can be efficiently transported to the coupled light sensor.
(23) In one or more embodiments, the detector screen of these teachings includes an organic scintillator comprised of a polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon molecule (C26H18) called diphenylanthracene (DPA) and a layer of neutron absorbing material, such as enriched lithium-6 fluoride (.sup.6LiF). The neutron absorbing material (.sup.6LiF in one embodiment) provides sensitivity for thermal neutron detection.
(24) One embodiment of the detector screen of these teachings is shown in
(25) Since DPA is partly comprised of hydrogen, fast neutrons can interact with DPA through elastic scatter on the hydrogen nucleus, thus releasing an energetic proton that directly ionizes the DPA to produce scintillation. The present teachings can include, in one embodiment, a stand-alone micro-columnar DPA screen deposited onto a transparent substrate for a fast-neutron imaging application. Alternatively, the screen can be modified for ultra-cold, cold, or thermal neutron-imaging applications by adding a thin layer of enriched Lithium-6-Fluoride (.sup.6LiF) between the DPA and the transparent substrate. An alpha and triton particle are released from the nucleus of .sup.6Li in opposite directions to one another upon the capture of a cold/thermal neutron. Since the triton can travel further (˜40 um) in .sup.6LiF than the alpha (˜5 um), the thickness of the .sup.6LiF layer is effectively limited to 30-40 um to allow for the triton to leave with sufficient kinetic energy such that it can still ionize the DPA and produce scintillation. Consequently, the thermal neutron detection efficiency is also limited. To achieve nearly 99% cold/thermal neutron detection efficiency, a .sup.6LiF layer of approximately 150-200 micrometers would be required. By stacking layers of DPA and .sup.6LiF on top of each other, a high detection efficiency can be achieved.
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(28) Both DPA samples were placed on a Photometrics camera system that captured light during a total of five, five second X-ray exposures at 100 kV and 20 mA (25 seconds total). The peak sensitivity of the camera is in the wavelength range for green light. Each of the five images were flat-field corrected with individual dark and flood images, and later summed together to produce the image in
(29) Measurements were performed in order to demonstrate pulse shape discrimination (PSD). Pulse Shape Discrimination (PSD) is based on the difference in the shape of the neutron and gamma signals. The blue emitting DPA sample was placed on a Hamamatsu R6233-100A SBA PMT, operated at −1500V, and enclosed in a light-tight box. No optical grease was used to couple the DPA screen to the PMT window. A mixed neutron/gamma field was provided by a partially-moderated Americium-Beryllium (AmBe) source placed within 5 cm of the sample. A 12 bit CAEN DT5720 digitizer (4 ns steps, 2 V range), was used to record pulses directly from the PMT, where the data was then processed to produce the PSD shown in
(30) Three samples of vacuum depositing DPA as shown in
(31) The high index of refraction of DPA (over 1.7) is of a significant benefit as the material can be injected into capillary arrays to form a high resolution neutron scintillator. In one instance, the capillary array is a hollow generalized cylinder having one end open and the other end closed. The capillary array is made out of an optically transparent material with an index of refraction smaller than the index of refraction of the crystalline organic scintillator material. In one instance, the capillary arrays are made of borosilicate glass with index of less than 1.5 or so (see G. Tompkins, Smith, Steven & Convey, Diana, (2000). Optimizing the ellipsometric analysis of a transparent layer on glass, Surface and Interface Analysis. Vol. 29, pp. 845-850, December 2000). High index DPA incorporated into capillary arrays make a compelling case for effective channeling of scintillation light, just as fiberoptic fibers. A thick scintillator built this way will form a high resolution scintillator for fast neutron detection and imaging. The DPA material can be mixed with ions having high cross-section for thermal to cold neutrons and the resulting scintillator can be used for high resolution thermal neutron imaging.
(32) An exterior perspective view of an embodiment of a scintillator of these teachings disposed in a capillary is shown in
(33) Borosilicate glass can be made of enriched .sup.10B to increase the rate of thermal neutron capture probability. Alternatively, an atomic layer deposition of .sup.10B enriched layer can be used to achieve the same.
(34) Referring to
(35) The space between the scintillator and the capillary structure is filled with a plastic material 65. The plastic material 65 could be fabricated as described in U.S. Pat. No. 10,266,759, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety and for all purposes. The plastic material is chosen to have an index of refraction less than the index of refraction of the crystalline organic scintillator material 15. For example, the plastic material 65 can be polystyrene (PS), polyvinylchloride (PVC) and polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA), four Polyvinyltoluene (PVT) (all of which have an index of refraction less than 1.7). It should be noted that these teachings are not limited only to those examples of the plastic material 65. In other instances, the plastic material could be cured optical adhesive. It should also be noted that, although the figures show a pair of a layer of crystalline organic scintillator material 15 of a thin layer of neutron absorbing material 25, embodiments having only one layer of crystalline organic scintillator material 15 over a thin layer of neutron absorbing material 25 are also within the scope of these teachings.
(36) Referring to
(37) The material of the capillary structure and the plastic material 65 and dimensions are selected such that scintillation light is channeled by total internal reflection.
(38) In any of the capillaries shown in
(39) For the purposes of describing and defining the present teachings, it is noted that the term “substantially” is utilized herein to represent the inherent degree of uncertainty that may be attributed to any quantitative comparison, value, measurement, or other representation. In respect to optical operations, such as transparency, the inherent degree of uncertainty is the degree of uncertainty known to one skilled in the art. The term “substantially” is also utilized herein to represent the degree by which a quantitative representation may vary from a stated reference without resulting in a change in the basic function of the subject matter at issue.
(40) It should be noted that these teachings are not limited only to those two embodiments, and that many different embodiments of the scintillator screen of these teachings can be disposed in a capillary structure. Although these teachings have been described with respect to various embodiments, it should be realized these teachings are also capable of a wide variety of further and other embodiments within the spirit and scope of these teachings.