Publications

14 Results

Search results

Jump to search filters

Interaction position, time, and energy resolution in organic scintillator bars with dual-ended readout

Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment

Sweany, Melinda; Brown, Joshua A.; Brubaker, Erik B.; Dorrill, R.; Druetzler, A.; Galindo-Tellez, A.; Kaneshige, N.; Learned, J.; Nishimura, K.; Wonseok, Bae

We report on the position, timing, and energy resolution of a range of plastic scintillator bars and reflector treatments using dual-ended silicon photomultiplier readout. These measurements are motivated by the upcoming construction of an optically segmented single-volume neutron scatter camera, in which neutron elastic scattering off of hydrogen is used to kinematically reconstruct the location and energy of a neutron-emitting source. For this application, interaction position resolutions of about 10 mm and timing resolutions of about 1 ns are necessary to achieve the desired efficiency for fission-energy neutrons. The results presented here indicate that this is achievable with an array of 5×5×190mm 3 bars of EJ-204 scintillator wrapped in Teflon tape, read out with SensL's J-series 6×6mm 2 silicon photomultipliers. With two independent setups, we also explore the systematic variability of the position resolution, and show that, in general, using the difference in the pulse arrival time at the two ends is less susceptible to systematic variation than using the log ratio of the charge amplitude of the two ends. Finally, we measure a bias in the absolute time of interactions as a function of position along the bar: the measured interaction time for events at the center of the bar is ∼100 ps later than interactions near the SiPM.

More Details

SCEMA: A high channel density electronics module for fast waveform capture

Journal of Instrumentation

Brown, Joshua A.; Brubaker, Erik B.; Steele, John T.; Nishimura, K.

The development of fast, highly pixelated photodetectors with single-photon sensitivity has the potential to enable a variety of new radiation detection concepts. Systems that desire to employ these detectors without loss of information demand waveform digitization with high sampling rates. Switched capacitor arrays provide a low-cost, low-power, compact solution to fast readout with high channel density. The Sandia Laboratories Compact Electronics for Modular Acquisition (SCEMA) was developed to meet these demands. A single module employs two domino ring sampling switched capacitor arrays (DRS4) [1] to provide 16 channels of up to 5 GS/s waveform digitization. This paper presents an overview of the board design and function. Calibration procedures for the module are discussed. Finally, temporal resolution tests are presented demonstrating the module's viability as readout for high fidelity temporal measurements of single photons in suitable photodetectors.

More Details

Progress toward a compact high-efficiency neutron scatter camera

Brown, Joshua A.; Brubaker, Erik B.; Cabrera-Palmer, Belkis C.; Druetzler, Andy; Elam, Jeff; Febbraro, Michael; Feng, Patrick L.; Folsom, Micah; Goldblum, Bethany; Hausladen, Paul; Kaneshige, Nate; Laplace, Thibault; Learned, John; Mane, Anil; Marleau, Peter M.; Mattingly, John; Mishra, Mudit; Nishimura, Kurtis; Steele, John T.; Sweany, Melinda; Ziock, Klaus

Abstract not provided.

14 Results
14 Results