Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1789542 | Journal of Crystal Growth | 2016 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
KCaI3:Eu crystals have been identified as very promising for use in spectroscopic detector applications related to nuclear nonproliferation and domestic security efforts. Initial studies have shown for small crystals a few mm3 in size with 3% europium dopant concentration, a high light yield of >70,000Â ph/MeV and energy resolution of â3% at 662Â keV is attainable which is comparable with the highest performance scintillators discovered. In this work, single crystals of KCaI3 with a range of Eu2+ doping between 0 and 5Â at% substituting for Ca2+ were grown at 22Â mm diameter and their performance for gamma-ray spectroscopy studied. Comparisons among crystals approximately Ã22Â mmÃ22Â mm (8.4Â cm3 or â0.5Â in3) provide a more accurate understanding of how scintillation performance changes with Eu doping and increased crystal size. KCaI3 in the undoped form is shown to be a highly efficient intrinsic scintillator with a defect-related emission at 404Â nm which coexists with the Eu2+ 5d-4f emission in low dopant concentrations and is completely re-absorbed in more heavily doped crystals. For larger crystals, effects from self-absorption due to Eu activation become more evident by a near doubling of decay time for 0.5Â in3 crystals as the activator is increased from 0.5 to 5.0Â at% Eu. Comparisons of pulse-height spectra obtained for Ã22Â mmÃ22Â mm cylinders with varying Eu concentration suggests best performance is achieved using lower Eu additions closer to 0.5-1.0Â at%. Using a modified crystal packaging featuring an offset reflector geometry, 0.5Â in3 crystals of KCaI3:Eu can attain under 4% energy resolution at 662Â keV.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Condensed Matter Physics
Authors
Adam C. Lindsey, Mariya Zhuravleva, Yuntao Wu, Luis Stand, Matthew Loyd, Sasmit Gokhale, Merry Koschan, Charles L. Melcher,