Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1883264 Radiation Measurements 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Calibration quartz (180–250 μm and 4–11 μm) for beta source calibration.•Description of luminescence characteristics: multi-grain and single-grain.•Dose recovery ratio is indistinguishable from unity with a standard deviation of <2%.•>80% of individual grains give a useful signal.•Unexplained dispersion of ∼3% in multi-grain data.

For luminescence dating to be an accurate absolute dating technique it is very important that we are able to deliver absolutely known radiation doses in the laboratory. This is normally done using a radiation source (alpha, beta, X-ray) calibrated against an absolutely known reference source. Many laboratories have used the various different batches of Risø calibration quartz for the calibration of beta and X-ray sources, but these have been largely undescribed. Here we describe in detail the preparation and luminescence characteristics of a new quartz standard, based on a North Sea beach sand collected from south-western Denmark (Rømø). Two grain sizes (4–11 μm and 180–250 μm) have been examined in detail. These were pre-treated (annealed, dosed and annealed again) to sensitise and stabilise the luminescence signals before being given an absolutely known gamma dose from a point 137Cs source in scatter-free geometry. The luminescence characteristics are described; the very intense blue-light stimulated signal is dominated by the fast OSL component and the IR-stimulated signal is negligible. The material is shown to be suitable for measurement using SAR, and the dose recovery ratio is indistinguishable from unity with a standard deviation of <2% for multi-grain aliquots. The material is also shown to be suitable for single-grain calibration, with >80% of the grains giving a useful signal. Although there is an unexplained dispersion in our calibration data of ∼3% (which we cannot attribute to instrument variability), we nevertheless conclude that this material is very suitable for transferring absolute known doses from a standardised gamma source to in-built irradiation sources.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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