4.5 Article

Design of 4 pi High-Efficiency Directional Radiation Detector Based on Compton Scattering

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE
Volume 69, Issue 4, Pages 832-839

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNS.2022.3159663

Keywords

Compton scattering; directional detector; scintillator; silicon photomultiplier (SiPM)

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This article proposes a novel directional radiation detector based on a segmented hollow cubic detector and GAGG scintillator, achieving efficient 4 pi radiation detection capability without the drawbacks of traditional heavy collimators.
Obtaining directional information is required in many applications such as nuclear homeland security, contamination mapping after a nuclear incident and radiological events, or during the decontamination work. However, many directional radiation detectors are based on directional shielding, made of lead or tungsten collimators, introducing two main drawbacks. The first is the size and weight, making those detectors too heavy and irrelevant for utilization in handheld devices, drone mapping, or space applications. The second drawback is the limited field of view (FOV), which requires multiple detectors to cover the whole required FOV or machinery to rotate the detector's narrow FOV detector. We propose a novel 4 pi directional detector based on a segmented hollow cubic detector, which uses the Compton effect interactions with no heavy collimators. The symmetrical cubical design provides both higher efficiency and 4 pi detection ability. Instead of the traditional two types of detectors (scatterer and absorber) structure, we use the same type of detector, based on Gd3Al2Ga3O12 (GAGG) (Ce) scintillator coupled to silicon photomultiplier. An additional advantage of the proposed detector is obtained by locating the photon sensors inside the detector, behind the scintillators, which improves the radiation hardness required for space applications. Furthermore, such an arrangement flattens the temperature variation across the detector, providing better gain stability. The main advantage of the proposed detector is an efficient 4 pi radiation detection for high-energy gamma rays without the use of heavy collimators.

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