Radiation monitor based on wavelength-dependent optical absorption in fused silica optical fibers
10317539 ยท 2019-06-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
G01T1/06
PHYSICS
Abstract
A radiation monitor apparatus and method based on wavelength-dependent optical absorption in fused silica optical fibers. The radiation monitor uses the radiation induced optical changes in fused silica optical fibers as a way to quantify and differentiate the large doses of radiation from high energy photons and neutrons as well as providing a method to extend the sensitivity over a large dynamic range of doses from 103 to beyond 106 rads. The radiation monitor enables dynamic monitoring of highly ionizing radiation environments. The radiation monitor reduces sensitivity saturation at high dose levels, provides increased sensitivity over a large dynamic range of doses, and enables differentiation between high energy photon and neutron contributions or poor signal to noise.
Claims
1. A method for remotely determining radiation dose caused by neutrons and high energy photons comprising: a photon source, a doped silica optical fiber, and a photon detector; transmitting light from the photon source through the optical fiber to the photon detector; measuring the intensity of the photons on the photon detector; determining the optical attenuation changes to the optical fiber induced by the radiation as a function of time and temperature; determining the portion of the optical attenuation changes that are delivered to the doped silica optical fiber by the neutrons; determining the portion of the optical attenuation changes that are delivered to the doped silica optical fiber by the high energy photons; converting the optical attenuation changes caused by the separate neutron and high energy photon irradiations to a separate dose delivered by each of the neutron and high energy photon components; providing a mathematical algorithm for calibrating the measurement of the radiation dose; and calibrating the determination of the optical absorption changes based on annealing as a function of time and temperature.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said photon source comprises a broadband photon source.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein said broadband photon source comprises a diode laser.
4. The method of claim 2 wherein said broadband photon source is selected from the group consisting of ultraviolet photon source, visible photon source, and infrared photon source.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the neutrons and high energy photons include gamma-rays and x-ray.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein said photon detector comprises a broadband photon detector.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein said doped silica fiber is selected from the group consisting of single mode fiber and multimode fiber.
8. The method of claim 1 comprising: said photon source outputs monochromatic light including a wavelength; and the wavelength is between 640 nm and 1310 nm.
9. The method of claim 1 comprising: determining further radiation induced changes to the optical fiber; and the further radiation induced changes to the optical fiber include polarization changes, refractive index alteration, changes in the timing resolution of light pulses sent through the fibers, and transient luminescence during irradiation.
10. The radiation monitor of claim 1 wherein the algorithm comprises:
A(.sub.i,)=A.sub.(.sub.i,
)+A.sub.N(.sub.i,
) wherein A (.sub.i,
) is the total observed induced absorption from a mixed gamma/neutron irradiation; .sub.i is the choice of optical wavelengths used to monitor the absorption changes;
is the total length of fiber exposed to the radiation; A.sub.(.sub.i,
) is the radiation absorbed from high energy photons; and A.sub.N(.sub.i,
) is the radiation absorbed from neutrons.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING(S)
(1) Reference is made herein to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) The current invention provides a radiation monitor and method that makes use of the radiation induced optical changes in fused silica optical fibers as a way to quantify and differentiate the large doses of radiation from high energy photons and neutrons. Fused silica optical fibers are well known to have very high radiation tolerances even up to the 10.sup.6 rad level. As with many optically transmissive materials in the UV-VIS-IR region, the level of optical absorption is a function of wavelength with the UV and blue region suffering the greatest absorption changes as a function of increased dose while the green, red and infrared have smaller levels of absorption in general. In addition, there are also specific absorption bands that can be more sensitive to radiation compared to nearby wavelength regions. As silica fibers have excellent transmission over many meters, this creates an opportunity to monitor radiation dose over a wide range of levels by making use of both the total length of fiber exposed to the radiation, and the choice of optical wavelengths used to monitor the absorption changes.
(7) With reference to
(8) The photon detector 26 is preferably of a type that can detect in the UV, visible range, and/or infrared range and can be a solid state semiconductor type such as a photodiode, an avalanche photodiode, a limited geiger-mode avalanche photodiode (common name: silicon photomultiplier, SiPM, or MPPC), a vacuum tube based photodetector, a dynode-based photomultiplier (either single channel or multichannel), or a microchannel-based photomultiplier (single or multichannel). The stable photon source 22 is preferably a light source that can emit in the same UV, visible or infrared range as the photon detector and can be a solid state semiconductor type such as a light emitting diode (LED) or a laser diode. The optical fiber 24 can be a single mode fiber (only with laser diode as light source) or multimode fibers (with any light source). The preferred embodiment would be a single mode fiber with a laser diode light source and a photodiode photon detector.
(9) The portion of the fiber to be exposed to the high radiation field is wound in a tight spool. The two ends of the fiber are placed in an environment with either no or very low radiation levels. At one end, a light (photon) detectora photodiode is preferred, but other choices of photodetector are possible where warrantedis placed to monitor the amount of light transmitted through the fiber from a light sourcepreferably a LED or laser diode. A laser diode is particularly useful as it can be chosen for its emission of a specific wavelength of interest. The laser diode may also be preferred for single mode fibers as these fibers are less likely to change their output depending upon the mechanical handling and layout details of the fiber. Light emitting diodes (LED) may be the preferred light source for multimode fibers. Special care in calibration for the specific mechanical layout of the optical fiber may be necessary as these are more prone to changes in light output during fiber handling. The two choices of detector and light source would be the easiest to implement and most cost effective. It should be noted that the fibers recover from the optical damage through a process called annealing.
(10) Annealing is the process by which the fiber recovers its optical transmissive properties after irradiation halts. This process is dependent on the time duration and temperature that the fiber is held at during the annealing process. Optical damage occurs under irradiation through the creation of absorption centers in the fiber material. Even as irradiation occurs self-annealing is occurring but at a much lower rate.
(11) The novelty of this invention lies in the understanding of the annealing process and in the use of the differential effects of neutron and gamma irradiations upon select types of silica-based optical fibers. In this specific case, fluorine doped fibers showed a distinctly different induced attenuation from germanium-doped fibers at 1550 nm when exposed to a mixture of high energy photon and neutrons. In this invention, these effects will be exploited at several wavelengths (640, 940 and 1310 nm) in order to take advantage of the differences occurring at these wavelengths both as a function of dose and as a function of whether the source is from high energy photons or neutrons.
(12) An example of wavelength dependent effects in a silica fiber is shown in
(13) Such a system requires a calibration which will have to include the annealing effects as well as the differences in induced absorption between high energy gamma and neutron irradiations. The simplest implementation would be to use a blue or UV LED (370-450 nm) as the light source and a photodiode which would generate an electrical current that could be monitored. It is possible that a specific length of fiber (with the irradiated portion wound into a tight spool) would be appropriate so that a very wide dynamic range from 1 Gy to 1 MGy could be used.
(14) In regards to differential sensitivity to gamma vs neutron irradiation, there could be some significant wavelength difference in attenuation development, either within a specific kind of fiber, or key differences among a select group of fibers. For a specific fluorine doped silica fiber, high energy gammas produce very little damage in the near infrared (1.3 m) while there are detectable changes in the UV-VIS region. Hypothetically, if neutron irradiation produced damage in this infrared region, then one would have a differential effect to utilize in distinguishing the effects of gammas and neutrons in a mixed field background. There could be a clear differential in the functional form of the absorption changes as a function of dose (fluence) and wavelength that will separate the effects of neutrons and gammas in a mixed field.
(15) In general terms, the observed induced absorption from a mixed gamma/neutron irradiation can be written as a linear sum:
A(.sub.i,)=A.sub.(.sub.i,
)+A.sub.N(.sub.i,
)
(16) with the gamma () and neutron (N) portions contributing independently. The absorption is both a function of the irradiated length () of the specific fiber and the set of discrete monitored wavelengths .sub.i.
(17) Each of the distinct absorptions can be characterized as a quadratic polynomial:
A.sub.,N(x)=.sub.,N+.sub.,Nw(x)+.sub.,Nw.sup.2(x)
(18) for a specific dose (fluence) x. The three parameters (,) must be determined through a set of calibration measurements. The effects of annealing, both online as a function of dose rate and temperature, or post-irradiation, can be similarly determined.
(19) With reference to
(20) The current invention combines the use of several features of silica based optical fibers when exposed to high energy ionizing radiation. First, that radiation creates small but detectable changes in optical absorption as a function of absorbed dose. Second this change is dependent on the wavelength of light being transmitted through the fiber. Third, this change is dependent on specific doping features of the fiber, for example, germanium doping versus fluorine doping. Fourth, the optical absorption for a specific doped fiber is different depending upon whether the ionizing dose is from high energy neutrons or high energy photons. Taken together, this allows one to not only measure the delivered dose, but to also distinguish between the dosage from neutrons and gammas.
(21) According to the invention, care is taken to setup the initial system, mostly based on length and type of fiber exposed to the irradiation, so as to measure quantitatively the correct dynamic range. In this manner, it will be possible to avoid either not being sensitive to low doses (102 to 104 rad) or to avoid saturation at very high doses (>106 rad). The current invention would potentially allow a very large dynamic range (102->107 rad). A potential intrinsic limitation is the fact that the effects of high energy charged particles (especially hadrons) is not known and may show some distinct behavior different from the effects of high energy photons or neutrons.
(22) Ion chambers of specific configurations could also be used, but suffer from low signal to noise ratios. By choosing between the type of fiber and the length of fiber (wound in a compact spool) exposed to radiation, one can adjust for expected dose levels (kilorads versus megarads) and so optimize the signal to noise.
(23) The description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, but is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. The embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and the practical application, and to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.