Radiation Detection and Surveying Flashcards

1
Q

Definition of specific activity?

A

The amount of radio-activity found in a gram of material

E.g., Radioactive material with long half life will have low specific activity

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2
Q

What happens to energetically charged particles when they pass through a radiation detector?

A

As the charged particles pass through matter they slow down due to friction, loose energy and get attenuated.

Will kick off e-, so get a trail of ionised atoms

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3
Q

What do Rad-dectors use to measure trails of ionised atoms?

A

Use high voltages to measure electric current

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4
Q

What are the two things that happen when radiation interacts with matter?

A
  1. Excitation

2. Ionisation

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5
Q

What are the three ways gamma particles interact with matter?

A
  • Photoelectric effect
  • Compton scattering
  • Pair production

These are attenuation mechanisms

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6
Q

Explain how the photoelectric effect works (Gamma attenuation)?

A

Photon gives up all its energy to an inner shell electron.
Ejects the photon from the atom.

  • Relatively low energy adsorbed by material
  • Can detect energy adsorbed and work out energy of original photon
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7
Q

Explain how the compton scattering works (Gamma attenuation)?

A

High photon energy which is partially given to the inner shell electron.
Photon is scattered with a reduced energy.

  • Angle of re-emission changes the energy adsorbed by the atom so cannot work out original photon energy
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8
Q

Explain how the pair production works (Gamma attenuation)?

A

Photon hits the nucleus, creates positron and electron

  • Needs 1.02MeV from photon
  • Both positron and electron lose energy
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9
Q

If water is used as an attenuation medium, which attenuation mechanisms dominate?

A
  • Photon energy needs to be ~30MeV
  • Photoelectric effect dominates
  • If energy increases will go into compton realm
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10
Q

What are the three types of detectors? and what they detect?

A
  1. Gas Counter (Geiger)
    - detect alpha, beta some gamma
    - no isotope ID
  2. Scintillator
    - detect alpha, beta and gamma
    - moderate/bad info about type of radiation
  3. Solid and state detectors
    - detect gamma (alpha and beta in lab only)
    - excellent resolution
    - can measure radioisotopes
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11
Q

Advantages of Gas-filled detectors?

A
  • Highly sensitive
  • Detect low intensity radiation
  • Simple electronic amplification
  • Little need to reduce noise
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12
Q

Disadvantages fo Gas-filled detectors?

A
  • Cannot tell between alpha, beta or gamma
  • No energy discrimination
  • Entire gas volume ionised
  • Dead time
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13
Q

Why do you get dead time in a Gieger-Muller tube? (Gas-filled detector)

A

Due to time required for +ve argon ions to drift to the cathode and accept electrons.

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14
Q

How does a gas-filled detector work?

A

Two stage ionisation process:

  1. ions produced by radiation effects
  2. ions additional produced in gas by Coulombic effects and collected at electrodes in the detector.
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15
Q

How do scintillation detectors work?

A
  • Detect radiation by induction of luminescence

- Absorb energy and emit visible EM radiation

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16
Q

What happens inside a scintillator?

A
  1. Excitation upon absorption of radiation
  2. Emit light photons (de-excitation)
  3. Transit of light to the photocathode in the photomultiplier tube.

Photomultiplier tube converts electronic detector outputs into useful info.

17
Q

How do solid-state semiconductors work?

A
  • Chamber filled with solid-state material e.g., diamond

- Will act as insulator until photons interact and acts as conductor

18
Q

Pros and cons of solid-state semiconductors?

A

Pros:

  • Fast response
  • Less statistical fluctuation

Cons:

  • Sensitive to heat, has to be cooled
  • Photomultiplier output is week, have to amplify