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AVAILABLE
TECHNOLOGIES |
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Fast
Scintillation Detectors Using Direct-Gap Semiconductors |
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APPLICATION
OF TECHNOLOGY:
- Detection of ionizing radiation (e.g. x-rays, gamma rays,
neutrons)
- Nuclear materials detection
- Nondestructive materials evaluation
- Nuclear medical imaging
- Electromagnetic shower counters for high energy physics
and astrophysics
- Oil well logging
ADVANTAGES:
- Doping strategy is designed to transform a direct-gap
semiconductor into a fast, luminous scintillator
- The CdS(In, Te) scintillator has good luminosity and a
response time of 3 ns, 10 to 100 times faster than conventional
scintillators
- Improved doping of CdS scintillator will further increase
both luminosity and speed
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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:
Derenzo and colleagues have successfully codoped cadmium sulfide
with indium to make the material n-type, and with tellurium
to trap holes. The indium doping provides energetic electrons
throughout the material and the tellurium doping traps the
holes produced by ionizing radiation before they can be lost
to non-radiative traps. This novel combination of dopants
results in a scintillator with the same red emission as the
slow tellurium-doped scintillator but with a fast decay time
of 3 ns. Further work is underway to substantially increase
the luminous efficiency by replacing the tellurium isoelectronic
hole trap with an impurity acceptor ion.
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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:
Please see US Patent #7,048,872.
S. E. Derenzo, M.
J. Weber and M. K. Klintenberg, Temperature dependence
of the fast, near-band-edge scintillation from CuI, HgI2,
PbI2, ZnO:Ga, and CdS:In, Nucl Instr Meth, vol.
A486, pp. 214-219, 2002, LBNL-49282
S. Derenzo, M. Weber, M. Klintenberg and E. Bourret, The
quest for the ideal inorganic scintillator, Nucl
Instr Meth, (in press) 2002, LBNL-50779
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CONTACT:
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Technology
Transfer Department
E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
MS 90-1070
Berkeley, CA 94720
(510) 486-6467 FAX: (510) 486-6457
TTD@lbl.gov |
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