Publications

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Special Nuclear Material Detection and Monitoring by Environmental Activation Products Detection

Marleau, P.; Shinner, Matthew

Through a series of measurements with a high purity germanium detector, we have established that the past presence of neutron emitting material can be detected by the decay of activation products in aluminum containers, tungsten shielding, and concrete floors even several days after last exposure. The time since last exposure can also be estimated by the gamma-ray detection rate. These findings may lead to interesting new CONOPS in the detection of illicit SNM or the verification of the absence (or presence) of SNM containing objects in facilities and/or transit even after the material has been removed.

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Characterization of a Silicon photo-multiplier summing breakout board for photo-multiplier tube replacement

Sweany, Melinda D.; Marleau, P.; Kallenbach, Gene A.

We present the relative timing and pulse-shape discrimination performance of a H1949-50 photomultiplier tube to SensL ArrayX-B0B6_64S coupled to a SensL ArrayC-60035-64P- PCB Silicon Photomultiplier array. The goal of this work is to enable the replacement of photomultiplier readout of scintillators with Silicon Photomultiplier devices, which are more robust and have higher particle detection efficiency. The report quantifies the degradation of these performance parameters using commercial off the shelf summing circuits, and motivates the development of an improved summing circuit: the pulse-shape descrimination figure-of-merit drops from 1.7 at 500 keVee to 1.4, and the timing resolution (σ) is 288 ps for the photomultiplier readout and approximately 1 ns for the Silicon Photomultiplier readout. A degradation of this size will have a large negative impact on any device that relies on timing coincidence or pulse-shape discrimination to detect neutron interactions, such as neutron kinematic imaging or multiplicity measurements.

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Feasibility of Single-sided 3D elemental imaging

Sweany, Melinda D.; Gerling, Mark; Marleau, P.; Monterial, Mateusz

We present single-sided 3D image reconstruction and neutron spectrum of non-nuclear material interrogated with a deuterium-tritium neutron generator. The results presented here are a proof-of-principle of an existing technique previously used for nuclear material, applied to non-nuclear material. While we do see excess signatures over background, they do not have the expected form and are currently un-identified.

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Source detection at 100 meter standoff with a time-encoded imaging system

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

Brennan, J.; Brubaker, Erik M.; Gerling, Mark; Marleau, P.; Monterial, M.; Nowack, A.; Schuster, P.; Sturm, B.; Sweany, Melinda D.

We present the design, characterization, and testing of a laboratory prototype radiological search and localization system. The system, based on time-encoded imaging, uses the attenuation signature of neutrons in time, induced by the geometrical layout and motion of the system. We have demonstrated the ability to detect a ∼1mCi252Cf radiological source at 100m standoff with 90% detection efficiency and 10% false positives against background in 12min. This same detection efficiency is met at 15s for a 40m standoff, and 1.2s for a 20m standoff.

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Position sensitivity within a bar of stilbene coupled to silicon photomultipliers

2016 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium, Medical Imaging Conference and Room-Temperature Semiconductor Detector Workshop, NSS/MIC/RTSD 2016

Ruch, Marc L.; Marleau, P.; Pozzi, Sara A.

A 6-mm by 6-mm by 50-mm bar of stilbene was coupled on both ends to silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) to assess the detector's position sensitivity to interactions throughout the bar. A Na-22 gamma ray source was collimated with a pair of lead bricks to produce a source beam that was used to irradiate five positions along the length of the bar. A logarithmic relationship between the ratio of the pulse heights obtained from the two SiPMs and the position of the collimated source was established. The standard deviation of the distribution of ratios from each measurement was propagated through the functional form to determine position resolution. The position resolution along the length of the bar was determined to have an average value of 4.9 mm.

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Null-hypothesis testing using distance metrics for verification of arms-control treaties

2016 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium, Medical Imaging Conference and Room-Temperature Semiconductor Detector Workshop, NSS/MIC/RTSD 2016

Khalil, Mohammad; Brubaker, Erik M.; Hilton, Nathan R.; Kupinski, Matthew A.; Macgahan, Christopher J.; Marleau, P.

We investigate the feasibility of constructing a data-driven distance metric for use in null-hypothesis testing in the context of arms-control treaty verification. The distance metric is used in testing the hypothesis that the available data are representative of a certain object or otherwise, as opposed to binary-classification tasks studied previously. The metric, being of strictly quadratic form, is essentially computed using projections of the data onto a set of optimal vectors. These projections can be accumulated in list mode. The relatively low number of projections hampers the possible reconstruction of the object and subsequently the access to sensitive information. The projection vectors that channelize the data are optimal in capturing the Mahalanobis squared distance of the data associated with a given object under varying nuisance parameters. The vectors are also chosen such that the resulting metric is insensitive to the difference between the trusted object and another object that is deemed to contain sensitive information. Data used in this study were generated using the GEANT4 toolkit to model gamma transport using a Monte Carlo method. For numerical illustration, the methodology is applied to synthetic data obtained using custom models for plutonium inspection objects. The resulting metric based on a relatively low number of channels shows moderate agreement with the Mahalanobis distance metric for the trusted object but enabling a capability to obscure sensitive information.

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Enabling Explosives and Contraband Detection

Sweany, Melinda D.; Marleau, P.; Monterial, M.

We present the design and performance of a proof-of-concept 32 channel material identification system. Our system is based on the energy-dependent attenuation of fast neutrons for four elements: hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen. We describe a new approach to obtaining a broad range of neutron energies to probe a sample, as well as our technique for reconstructing the molar densities within a sample. The system's performance as a function of time-of-flight energy resolution is explored using a Geant4-based Monte Carlo. Our results indicate that, with the expected detector response of our system, we will be able to determine the molar density of all four elements to within a 20-30% accuracy in a two hour scan time. In many cases this error is systematically low, thus the ratio between elements is more accurate. This degree of accuracy is enough to distinguish, for example, a sample of water from a sample of pure hydrogen peroxide: the ratio of oxygen to hydrogen is reconstructed to within 8 0.5% of the true value. Finally, with future algorithm development that accounts for backgrounds caused by scattering within the sample itself, the accuracy of molar densities, not ratios, may improve to the 5-10% level for a two hour scan time. Experimental performance was evaluated with various thicknesses of polyethylene. The detector response in terms of energy, particle identification, and timing are presented as well.

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Taking Advantage of Disorder: Small-Molecule Organic Glasses for Radiation Detection and Particle Discrimination

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Carlson, Joseph; Marleau, P.; Zarkesh, Ryan A.; Feng, Patrick L.

A series of fluorescent silyl-fluorene molecules were synthesized and studied with respect to their photophysical properties and response toward ionizing neutron and gamma-ray radiation. Optically transparent and stable organic glasses were prepared from these materials using a bulk melt-casting procedure. The prepared organic glass monoliths provided fluorescence quantum yields and radiation detection properties exceeding the highest-performing benchmark materials such as solution-grown trans-stilbene crystals. Co-melts based on blends of two different glass-forming compounds were prepared with the goal of enhancing the stability of the amorphous state. Accelerated aging experiments on co-melt mixtures ranging from 0% to 100% of each component indicated improved resistance to recrystallization in the glass blends, able to remain fully amorphous for >1 month at 60 °C. Secondary dopants comprising singlet fluorophores or iridium organometallic compounds provided further improved detection efficiency, as evaluated by light yield and neutron/gamma particle discrimination measurements. Optimized singlet and triplet doping levels were determined to be 0.05 wt % 1,4-bis(2-methylstyryl)benzene singlet fluorophore and 0.28 wt % Ir3+, respectively.

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Single-View 3-D Reconstruction of Correlated Gamma-Neutron Sources

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Monterial, M.; Marleau, P.; Pozzi, Sara A.

We describe a new method of 3-D image reconstruction of neutron sources that emit correlated gammas (e.g., Cf-252, Am-Be). This category includes a vast majority of neutron sources important in nuclear threat search, safeguards and non-proliferation. Rather than requiring multiple views of the source this technique relies on the source's intrinsic property of coincidence gamma and neutron emission. As a result, only a single-view measurement of the source is required to perform the 3-D reconstruction. In principle, any scatter camera sensitive to gammas and neutrons with adequate timing and interaction location resolution can perform this reconstruction. Using a neutron double scatter technique, we can calculate a conical surface of possible source locations. By including the time to a correlated gamma we further constrain the source location in three-dimensions by solving for the source-to-detector distance along the surface of the cone. As a proof of concept we applied these reconstruction techniques on measurements taken with the Mobile Imager of Neutrons for Emergency Responders (MINER). Two Cf-252 sources measured at 50 and 60 cm from the center of the detector were resolved in their varying depth with average radial distance relative resolution of 26%. To demonstrate the technique's potential with an optimized system we simulated the measurement in MCNPX-PoliMi assuming timing resolution of 200 ps (from 2 ns in the current system) and source interaction location resolution of 5 mm (from 3 cm). These simulated improvements in scatter camera performance resulted in radial distance relative resolution decreasing to an average of 11%.

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Results 76–100 of 251
Results 76–100 of 251
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