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SGER: IMR: Development of Efficient Thermal Neutron Position Sensitive Detectors

<p>Technical Abstract Our group plans to develop a novel type of thermal and cold neutron counting detector based on Boron and Gadolinium doped microchannel plates (MCPs). The new type of neutron imaging detectors will be optimized for imaging thermal neutrons with high detection efficiency (up to 50 %) and even higher for cold neutrons, spatial (~55 ��m) and time resolution of ~1 ms (or gated detection with gate accuracy 100 MHz with active area scalable to rectangular configuration of 28 x (N*14) mm2. Another attractive feature of the detector will be its ability to be synchronized with the external trigger, allowing energy selective imaging with a pulsed source. The neutron imaging devices will be rigorously tested at a neutron beamline, in collaboration with our colleagues from Nova Scientific. The proposed detection system will greatly facilitate thermal neutron imaging with very high counting rates, sensitivity and resolution, substantially increasing the accuracy of existing experiments (e.g. SNS residual stress profile measurements with the engineering instrument Vulcan, studies of small samples under very high pressures with the high pressure instrument SNAP, fuel cell studies), and may additionally open up entirely new areas of non destructive testing with modern neutron sources. Non-technical Abstract Neutrons are nuclear particles with no electronic charge which are very useful for studying the details of structure at the atomic level. They are particularly useful because they can probe atomic arrangements and study important materials properties such as magnetism and the vibrational properties of atoms in a crystal. However, detecting neutrons has always been a challenge. This proposal plans to use pieces of glass with many fine holes as a neutron detector. The neutrons pass through the holes, interact with the glass at the edge of the holes, and then, because of the special properties of the glass (addition of Boron or Gadolinium) the neutrons are converted to light, which can then be detected. The small size of the holes allows very high precision in locating the position of each neutron, so that images can be constructed. In addition, this detector system can count neutrons at the same rate that they are produced in the best neutron sources, allowing experiments that take full advantage of those new sources. </p>

Contact Info

Principal Investigator

Tremsin, Anton

PI Email

ast@ssl.berkeley.edu

Program Manager

Charles E. Bouldin

Organization

University of California-Berkeley

Organization Address

Sponsored Projects Office

City

BERKELEY

State

CA

Zip

94704

Phone

5106428109

Information

Award Number

753599

Award Amount to Date

85773

NSF Directorate

MPS

NSF Organization

DMR

Award Instrument

Standard Grant

Programs
  • MPS DMR INSTRUMENTATION
Program Element Codes
  • 1750
Program Reference Codes
  • AMPP
  • 9237
  • 9161
Field of Applications
  • 0106000 Materials Research
Start Date

2008-10-01T00:00:00Z

Last Amendment Date

2008-09-18T00:00:00Z

Expiration Date

2009-09-30T00:00:00Z