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APPLICATION OF TECHNOLOGY:
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ABSTRACT: Stephen Derenzo, Edith Bourret-Courchesne, Mattias Klintenberg, and Marvin Weber are developing a new class of room-temperature semiconductor scintillators with an extraordinary combination of efficiency, speed, and energy resolution for the detection of x-rays, gamma rays, and neutrons. This is the first time that a semiconductor has been intentionally doped with two impurity atoms to convert ionization energy into fast scintillation light with good efficiency. The Berkeley Lab direct-gap semiconducting scintillators are based on a previously unexploited scintillation mechanism where electrons in an impurity n-type donor band recombine with ionization holes trapped on impurity acceptor ions. These scintillators can be highly effective in detecting and identifying radioactive materials, and their timing resolution will aid in the detection of other hazardous materials by time-of-flight neutron activation. Research: |
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STATUS: U.S. Patent #7,048,872. Available for collaborative research and/or licensing. |
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REFERENCE NUMBER: IB-1833 |
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FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: |
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