EP0156801A4 - Method and apparatus for measuring radioactive decay. - Google Patents
Method and apparatus for measuring radioactive decay.Info
- Publication number
- EP0156801A4 EP0156801A4 EP19830903332 EP83903332A EP0156801A4 EP 0156801 A4 EP0156801 A4 EP 0156801A4 EP 19830903332 EP19830903332 EP 19830903332 EP 83903332 A EP83903332 A EP 83903332A EP 0156801 A4 EP0156801 A4 EP 0156801A4
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- signal
- pulses
- scintillator
- photomultiplier tube
- pulse
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Withdrawn
Links
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 title claims abstract description 7
- 230000005258 radioactive decay Effects 0.000 title description 3
- 239000007787 solid Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 22
- 230000004044 response Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 17
- 239000002245 particle Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 7
- 230000003993 interaction Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 5
- 230000005855 radiation Effects 0.000 claims description 12
- 238000003556 assay Methods 0.000 claims description 5
- 241000505673 Scintilla Species 0.000 claims description 4
- 230000002285 radioactive effect Effects 0.000 claims description 4
- 101100400378 Mus musculus Marveld2 gene Proteins 0.000 claims 2
- 230000000875 corresponding effect Effects 0.000 claims 2
- 230000002596 correlated effect Effects 0.000 claims 1
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 abstract description 11
- YZCKVEUIGOORGS-NJFSPNSNSA-N Tritium Chemical compound [3H] YZCKVEUIGOORGS-NJFSPNSNSA-N 0.000 abstract description 2
- 229910052722 tritium Inorganic materials 0.000 abstract description 2
- 239000011344 liquid material Substances 0.000 abstract 1
- 238000001514 detection method Methods 0.000 description 5
- 239000007788 liquid Substances 0.000 description 5
- WUKWITHWXAAZEY-UHFFFAOYSA-L calcium difluoride Chemical compound [F-].[F-].[Ca+2] WUKWITHWXAAZEY-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 3
- 229910001634 calcium fluoride Inorganic materials 0.000 description 3
- 238000012544 monitoring process Methods 0.000 description 3
- 239000012857 radioactive material Substances 0.000 description 3
- FVAUCKIRQBBSSJ-UHFFFAOYSA-M sodium iodide Chemical compound [Na+].[I-] FVAUCKIRQBBSSJ-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 description 3
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 2
- 239000011521 glass Substances 0.000 description 2
- KKEBXNMGHUCPEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 4-phenyl-1-(2-sulfanylethyl)imidazolidin-2-one Chemical compound N1C(=O)N(CCS)CC1C1=CC=CC=C1 KKEBXNMGHUCPEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 241000331231 Amorphocerini gen. n. 1 DAD-2008 Species 0.000 description 1
- 101100285518 Drosophila melanogaster how gene Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 241000251221 Triakidae Species 0.000 description 1
- 238000004458 analytical method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000003139 buffering effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000003247 decreasing effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000012530 fluid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000004907 flux Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000008187 granular material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000004128 high performance liquid chromatography Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000010354 integration Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052751 metal Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000002184 metal Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000003287 optical effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229920000136 polysorbate Polymers 0.000 description 1
- 239000002244 precipitate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 1
- 235000009518 sodium iodide Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 239000002904 solvent Substances 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01T—MEASUREMENT OF NUCLEAR OR X-RADIATION
- G01T1/00—Measuring X-radiation, gamma radiation, corpuscular radiation, or cosmic radiation
- G01T1/16—Measuring radiation intensity
- G01T1/20—Measuring radiation intensity with scintillation detectors
- G01T1/208—Circuits specially adapted for scintillation detectors, e.g. for the photo-multiplier section
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01T—MEASUREMENT OF NUCLEAR OR X-RADIATION
- G01T1/00—Measuring X-radiation, gamma radiation, corpuscular radiation, or cosmic radiation
- G01T1/16—Measuring radiation intensity
- G01T1/17—Circuit arrangements not adapted to a particular type of detector
- G01T1/178—Circuit arrangements not adapted to a particular type of detector for measuring specific activity in the presence of other radioactive substances, e.g. natural, in the air or in liquids such as rain water
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G01—MEASURING; TESTING
- G01T—MEASUREMENT OF NUCLEAR OR X-RADIATION
- G01T1/00—Measuring X-radiation, gamma radiation, corpuscular radiation, or cosmic radiation
- G01T1/36—Measuring spectral distribution of X-rays or of nuclear radiation spectrometry
- G01T1/38—Particle discrimination and measurement of relative mass, e.g. by measurement of loss of energy with distance (dE/dx)
Definitions
- the present invention relates to an instrument for assaying radioactivity. More particularly, the invention relates to a photon detector having a solid scintillator and a single photomultiplier tube.
- the counting of nuclear disintegrations emitted from select specimens is frequently accomplished with scintillator materials, photomultiplier tubes and associated circuitry including a pulse height analy ⁇ zer.
- a specimen of radioactive material is admixed with a liquid scintillator or is placed in the vicinity of a solid scintillator in close proximity to a photomultiplier tube.
- the radioactive material decays, the emitted particles interact with the scintillator producing light pho ⁇ tons which are collected by the photomultiplier tube.
- the tube in turn provides an electric signal output and with suitable intermediate circuitry the pulse height analyzer provides an output count for each photomultiplier tube signal which meets some prese ⁇ lected amplitude requirements.
- An object of the present invention is to pro ⁇ vide radioactivity monitoring using only one photo- multiplier tube. Another object is to be able to discriminate between the electric signals resulting from the noise inherent in a photomultiplier tube and the signals resulting from the interaction of radioactive decay particles with a scintillator material. These goals are achieved by a novel pulse discrimination circuit employing a photon counting technique.
- the present invention is predicted on the acknowledgment that the output pulse shape from the photomultiplier tube monitoring the interaction be ⁇ tween a liquid scintillator and nuclear radiation is identical to the output from the photomultiplier tube due to random noise.
- the invention is also predicted on the recognition that the output signal from a photomultiplier tube monitoring a solid
- BUR O scintillator event is actually a burst or continuum of component pulses extending over an interval of time which is long compared to the time duration of a tube noise pulse.
- Each component pulse is the photomultiplier tube response to a single photon.
- a single photo ⁇ multiplier tube is combined with amplifiers, a photon pulse counter, timers, and a pulse height analyzer forming a new pulse discriminating circuit that discriminates between tube noise pulses and pulses representing genuine nuclear events by recog ⁇ nizing that pulses representing a genuine nuclear event occur in bursts and that tube noise pulses do not.
- this radiation assay in- stru ent includes a solid scintillator, a photo ⁇ multiplier tube whose output is split among a two- path circuit containing along a first path means for providing an integrated pulse signal as input to a pulse height analyzer and containing in a second path means for discrimination which is based on the number of component pulses in the signal and for providing an enable signal to the pulse height analyzer.
- the measurement of radiation with such equipment involves interacting radiation from the specimen with a solid scintillator material, cap ⁇ turing the light consequently emitted from the scintillator with a photomultiplier tube, buffering the resultant electric signal from the photomulti ⁇ plier tube, integrating such buffered signal in the first of two parallel circuits to provide a smooth contour signal as input to a pulse height analyzer, differentiating the buffered signal in the second of the two parallel circuits to reduce each such signal to a series of sequenced component pulses, producing an output count with the pulse height analyzer for those smooth contour signals which fall within a preselected voltage range and contain at least a minimum number of component pulses as dis ⁇ cerned by the burst identifier.
- One of the distinguishing features of the present invention is that the system requires only one photomultiplier tube.
- a solid scintillator is used to detect the radiation and this type scintillator produces a burst of photons which individually occur at a rate far in excess of the rate of any random pulses from the photomulti ⁇ plier tube due to noise.
- the result is an assay instrument with improved counting efficiency as well as minimum detection level which is particu ⁇ larly useful for assaying beta and weak gamma emit- ting radionuclides. Since the instrument requires only one photomultiplier tube, the overall system is correspondingly less complicated and lower cost.
- the system encompassing the invention requires no pre ixing of solvents.
- the radioactive solution passes around the solid scintillator permitting radionuclide decay to activate the solid scintilla ⁇ tor with subsequent bursts of light photons propor ⁇ tionate to the energy of the nuclide.
- the liquid stream containing the radionuclide is completely recovered unchanged. Thus, the sample is easily recovered.
- Fig. 1 is a curve showing the electric charge and duration relationship for a typical electric output signal from a photomultiplier tube due to
- Fig. 2 is a curve showing the electric charge and duration relationship for a typical electric output signal from a photomultiplier tube in re- sponse to the photons produced in a solid scintilla ⁇ tor by a nuclear disintegration;
- Fig. 3 is a simplified block diagram showing the main components of a radiation assay instrument using a single photomultiplier tube in accordance with the present invention.
- Fig. 4 is a simplified high pressure flow cell containing solid scintillator material in accordance with the present invention.
- the present invention allows a radiation moni ⁇ tor to operate with the simplicity of one photomul ⁇ tiplier tube and avoids the problems of -timing the leading edge to zero crossing of pulses as is re ⁇ quired in the Colmenares et al and Landis et al articles.
- Random pulses from a photomultiplier tube are commonly referred to as tube noise and appear as electric pulses approximately ten nanoseconds in duration such as is shown in Fig. 1. While the pulses do occur randomly, the time between pulses is typically in the neighborhood of one hundred thousand nanoseconds.
- the photomultiplier tube output due to a photon burst from the scintillator is typically as is shown in Fig. 2.
- the photon pulse burst is characteristically spread over an interval of sev ⁇ eral microseconds. This characteristic is used to advantage in accordance with the present invention in a system having a solid scintillator material in the form of fine granules in a high pressure flow
- a flow cell 10 having suitable reflector means and packed with solid scintillator material is lo ⁇ cated adjacent to a photomultiplier tube 12 which feeds a buffer 14.
- the scintillator produces opti ⁇ cal pulses 16 which impinge on the photomultiplier 12 and result in an electric charge output signal 18 which is converted to a voltage signal with en ⁇ hanced drive capability by the buffer 14 and be ⁇ comes buffered signal 20.
- the buffered signal is split in two and follows a first parallel path 22 which comprises a differentiator 24 a first ampli- fier 26, a threshold detector 28 and a burst iden ⁇ tifier 30 and a second parallel path 32 which com ⁇ prises an integrator 34, a lead network 36 and a second amplifier 38.
- the differentiator looks at the buffered sig- nal and breaks it down into component or photon response pulses 40 which are amplified and input to the threshold detector. Pulses that exceed a certain threshold voltage emerge as digital output pulses 42. The burst identifier then interrogates the threshold detector output and each time an ar ⁇ bitrarily preselected number of pulses occurs with ⁇ in a somewhat arbitrarily preselected time duration, an enable signal 44 is passed to a pulse height analyzer 46. In accordance with a preferred em- bodiment of the present invention three pulses oc ⁇ curring within a seven hundred fifty nanosecond duration will precipitate an enable signal indi ⁇ cating the occurrence of a genuine nuclear event. This preselected time interval is not absolute and may be increased or decreased in duration by a few hundred nanoseconds with no functional deviation
- OM from the present invention.
- two pulses or four or more pulses occurring during the prescribed interval will work although not as well.
- interrogation of the threshold detector may result in a continuous or near continuous signal which is longer than the response of the threshold detector to a single pho- ton pulse and is caused by overlapping photon pulses.
- the continuous signal may have a duration of approximately two hundred to four hundred nanoseconds.
- the burst identifier will provide an enable signal to the pulse analyzer.
- the integrator looks at the buffered signal and by an integration process produces a smooth contoured integrated pulse 48.
- the inte ⁇ grated pulse is then shaped into a bipolar pulse by lead network 36 and after being amplified by the amplifier 38 emerges as an amplified bipolar pulse 50 which is fed to the pulse height analyzer 46.
- the pulse analyzer receives an enable signal 44 and a corresponding bipolar pulse 50 which satisfies the pulse height criteria set in the ana ⁇ lyzer an output count 52 is produced.
- Each output count corresponds to a nuclear disintegration of interest which caused an optical pulse 16 from the scintillator and is transmitted to the microproces- sor circuitry for proper analysis of the data.
- a flow cell 54 for use with the present inven ⁇ tion is shown in Fig. 4.
- the cell comprises a glass-walled centerpiece 56 having a filter element 58 at each end as is filled with a fine mesh solid scintillator material 60 such as calcium fluoride
- Inlet tube 62 and outlet tube 64 deliver and carry away respectively the fluid containing the radioactive material of interest.
- Typical dimensions for the cell are two inches in length, eight millimeters outside diameter and a two to five millimeter in ⁇ side diameter.
- the tubes are metal with chroma- tographic grade end fittings and filters and the scintillator particles are smaller than one hundred eighty mesh. With this apparatus a flow rate of one quarter to two milliliters per minute is main ⁇ tained and results in a pressure drop of fifty to three hundred pounds per square inch between the filter elements.
- the flow cell is used in co junc- tion with a high efficiency reflector to maximize the photon flux which reaches the photomultiplier tube.
- the system may also be utilized to measure radioactivity in gas streams.
- the invention has been described in terms of calcium fluoride and glass scintillator although the concept is workable with sodium iodide or any other long decay time scintillator material solid or liquid, i.e., one having an output photon burst which is long in comparison with the pulse interval of photomultiplier tube noise.
Landscapes
- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Spectroscopy & Molecular Physics (AREA)
- Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- High Energy & Nuclear Physics (AREA)
- Molecular Biology (AREA)
- Measurement Of Radiation (AREA)
- Nuclear Medicine (AREA)
Abstract
Method and apparatus for counting nuclear scintillations particularly the activity in a specimen containing tritium segregates the pulses which are emitted from a scintillator due on interaction with a nuclear particle from the pulses attributable to random noise. The system uses a single photomultiplier (12), the output of which is split among a two-path circuit (22, 32). A pulse height analyzer (46) provides an output when one path (32) has an integrated output signal of preselected amplitude when the other path (22) output has a preselected number of component photon response pulses occurring in a preselected period of time. The system is operable with many scintillation materials as long as the characteristic output from the scintillator is long relative to the duration of a random noise pulse. The preferred embodiment incorporates a solid scintillator although a liquid material may be substituted if the functional criteria are satisfied. Also discussed is the response of an apparatus in accordance with the present invention if some relatively high energy isotopes such as carbon-fourteen are tested.
Description
Method and Apparatus for Measuring Radioactive Decay
Background of the Invention The present invention relates to an instrument for assaying radioactivity. More particularly, the invention relates to a photon detector having a solid scintillator and a single photomultiplier tube.
The counting of nuclear disintegrations emitted from select specimens is frequently accomplished with scintillator materials, photomultiplier tubes and associated circuitry including a pulse height analy¬ zer. For a typical system a specimen of radioactive material is admixed with a liquid scintillator or is placed in the vicinity of a solid scintillator in close proximity to a photomultiplier tube. As the radioactive material decays, the emitted particles interact with the scintillator producing light pho¬ tons which are collected by the photomultiplier tube. The tube in turn provides an electric signal output and with suitable intermediate circuitry the pulse height analyzer provides an output count for each photomultiplier tube signal which meets some prese¬ lected amplitude requirements. A practical consi¬ deration which the described system has to contend with is the appropriate recognition of the output signals from the photomultiplier tube. These tubes have a high gain and often produce spurious signals which are simply noise. This noise is particularly troublesome to any attempt to quantitatively analyze a radioactive sample particularly under circumstances in which the count rate from the sample is relatively
* low or the energy of the radiation from the active nuclide is low. These considerations are fundamental concerns in the design of nuclear detection instru- mentation.
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One of the more common techniques for distin¬ guishing the events of interest from noise in the output signals from the photomultiplier tube is to use two photomultiplier tubes to collect photons from the scintillation material and compare their output signals. In order for a signal to be consi¬ dered by the pulse height analyzer a coincident signal must be received from each of the tubes thereby essentially eliminating the possibility of random noise being confused with a genuine nuclear event in the scintillator. Detection instruments with two photomultiplier tubes are routinely used on a commercial basis although there is incentive to continually upgrade such systems particularly if they can be made less elaborate or more efficient as a counter for particles of certain energies.
One attempt at simplifying a solid scintilla¬ tor system is described by D. Landis et al in a paper entitled "The Application of Pulse Shape Dis- crimination to Separating Phototube Noise Pulses from Scintillation Pulses" dated September 1, 1964. The device is simple in that only one photomulti¬ plier tube is required. The essence of its opera¬ tion involves measuring the width of the filtered pulse from the photomultiplier tube by timing the interval between the leading edge and zero crossing. Those pulses shorter than a preselected interval are attributed to noise and are therefore discarded while those pulses exceeding a minimum time inter- val are considered valid pulses resulting from a nuclear disintegration captured by the scintillator and are recorded. A similar pulse discrimination scheme is used with a flow gas system disclosed by Colmenares et al in a 1974 article entitled "A European Doped Calcium Fluoride Scintillator System for Low Level Tritium Detection." While the Landis
et al and Colmenares et al type systems are useful, each has drawbacks. One such drawback, for example, is a poor signal to noise ratio for low energy pulses.
In an article by L. N. Mackey et al entitled "High efficiency Solid Scintillation Radioactivity Detection for High Performance Liquid Chromatogra- phy", the authors disclosed related technology ap¬ plied to the design of a carbon-fourteen monitor. The system uses optimized electronics and particu¬ larly sized solid scintillator material in what is referred to as a heterogenous detector, i.e., the radioactive effluent is recoverable intact since it does not become mixed with a liquid scintillator. The system apparently is very good although two photomultiplier tubes are required.
Summary An object of the present invention is to pro¬ vide radioactivity monitoring using only one photo- multiplier tube. Another object is to be able to discriminate between the electric signals resulting from the noise inherent in a photomultiplier tube and the signals resulting from the interaction of radioactive decay particles with a scintillator material. These goals are achieved by a novel pulse discrimination circuit employing a photon counting technique.
The present invention is predicted on the acknowledgment that the output pulse shape from the photomultiplier tube monitoring the interaction be¬ tween a liquid scintillator and nuclear radiation is identical to the output from the photomultiplier tube due to random noise. The invention is also predicted on the recognition that the output signal from a photomultiplier tube monitoring a solid
"BUR O
scintillator event is actually a burst or continuum of component pulses extending over an interval of time which is long compared to the time duration of a tube noise pulse. Each component pulse is the photomultiplier tube response to a single photon.
According to the present invention, a single photo¬ multiplier tube is combined with amplifiers, a photon pulse counter, timers, and a pulse height analyzer forming a new pulse discriminating circuit that discriminates between tube noise pulses and pulses representing genuine nuclear events by recog¬ nizing that pulses representing a genuine nuclear event occur in bursts and that tube noise pulses do not. More specifically, this radiation assay in- stru ent includes a solid scintillator, a photo¬ multiplier tube whose output is split among a two- path circuit containing along a first path means for providing an integrated pulse signal as input to a pulse height analyzer and containing in a second path means for discrimination which is based on the number of component pulses in the signal and for providing an enable signal to the pulse height analyzer. The measurement of radiation with such equipment involves interacting radiation from the specimen with a solid scintillator material, cap¬ turing the light consequently emitted from the scintillator with a photomultiplier tube, buffering the resultant electric signal from the photomulti¬ plier tube, integrating such buffered signal in the first of two parallel circuits to provide a smooth contour signal as input to a pulse height analyzer, differentiating the buffered signal in the second of the two parallel circuits to reduce each such signal to a series of sequenced component pulses, producing an output count with the pulse height analyzer for those smooth contour signals which fall
within a preselected voltage range and contain at least a minimum number of component pulses as dis¬ cerned by the burst identifier.
One of the distinguishing features of the present invention is that the system requires only one photomultiplier tube. In addition, a solid scintillator is used to detect the radiation and this type scintillator produces a burst of photons which individually occur at a rate far in excess of the rate of any random pulses from the photomulti¬ plier tube due to noise. The result is an assay instrument with improved counting efficiency as well as minimum detection level which is particu¬ larly useful for assaying beta and weak gamma emit- ting radionuclides. Since the instrument requires only one photomultiplier tube, the overall system is correspondingly less complicated and lower cost. The system encompassing the invention requires no pre ixing of solvents. The radioactive solution passes around the solid scintillator permitting radionuclide decay to activate the solid scintilla¬ tor with subsequent bursts of light photons propor¬ tionate to the energy of the nuclide. The liquid stream containing the radionuclide is completely recovered unchanged. Thus, the sample is easily recovered.
The recited as well as other features, objects, characteristics and advantages of the present inven¬ tion will become more apparent with the reading and comprehension of the drawing and the description of preferred embodiments which follow. -
Description of the Drawing Fig. 1 is a curve showing the electric charge and duration relationship for a typical electric output signal from a photomultiplier tube due to
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spurious tube noise;
Fig. 2 is a curve showing the electric charge and duration relationship for a typical electric output signal from a photomultiplier tube in re- sponse to the photons produced in a solid scintilla¬ tor by a nuclear disintegration;
Fig. 3 is a simplified block diagram showing the main components of a radiation assay instrument using a single photomultiplier tube in accordance with the present invention; and
Fig. 4 is a simplified high pressure flow cell containing solid scintillator material in accordance with the present invention.
Brief Description of a Preferred Embodiment The present invention allows a radiation moni¬ tor to operate with the simplicity of one photomul¬ tiplier tube and avoids the problems of -timing the leading edge to zero crossing of pulses as is re¬ quired in the Colmenares et al and Landis et al articles. Random pulses from a photomultiplier tube are commonly referred to as tube noise and appear as electric pulses approximately ten nanoseconds in duration such as is shown in Fig. 1. While the pulses do occur randomly, the time between pulses is typically in the neighborhood of one hundred thousand nanoseconds. With the use of a solid scintillator the photomultiplier tube output due to a photon burst from the scintillator is typically as is shown in Fig. 2. The photon pulse burst is characteristically spread over an interval of sev¬ eral microseconds. This characteristic is used to advantage in accordance with the present invention in a system having a solid scintillator material in the form of fine granules in a high pressure flow
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cell (Fig. 4) which involves the use of a single photomultiplier tube as is represented schematically in Fig. 3.
A flow cell 10 having suitable reflector means and packed with solid scintillator material is lo¬ cated adjacent to a photomultiplier tube 12 which feeds a buffer 14. The scintillator produces opti¬ cal pulses 16 which impinge on the photomultiplier 12 and result in an electric charge output signal 18 which is converted to a voltage signal with en¬ hanced drive capability by the buffer 14 and be¬ comes buffered signal 20. The buffered signal is split in two and follows a first parallel path 22 which comprises a differentiator 24 a first ampli- fier 26, a threshold detector 28 and a burst iden¬ tifier 30 and a second parallel path 32 which com¬ prises an integrator 34, a lead network 36 and a second amplifier 38.
The differentiator looks at the buffered sig- nal and breaks it down into component or photon response pulses 40 which are amplified and input to the threshold detector. Pulses that exceed a certain threshold voltage emerge as digital output pulses 42. The burst identifier then interrogates the threshold detector output and each time an ar¬ bitrarily preselected number of pulses occurs with¬ in a somewhat arbitrarily preselected time duration, an enable signal 44 is passed to a pulse height analyzer 46. In accordance with a preferred em- bodiment of the present invention three pulses oc¬ curring within a seven hundred fifty nanosecond duration will precipitate an enable signal indi¬ cating the occurrence of a genuine nuclear event. This preselected time interval is not absolute and may be increased or decreased in duration by a few hundred nanoseconds with no functional deviation
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from the present invention. Further, two pulses or four or more pulses occurring during the prescribed interval will work although not as well. Alterna¬ tively, particularly with systems using radioiso- topes such as carbon-fourteen capable of emitting relatively high energy particles, interrogation of the threshold detector may result in a continuous or near continuous signal which is longer than the response of the threshold detector to a single pho- ton pulse and is caused by overlapping photon pulses. Under such circumstances, the continuous signal may have a duration of approximately two hundred to four hundred nanoseconds. In all such instances, the burst identifier will provide an enable signal to the pulse analyzer.
Similarly, the integrator looks at the buffered signal and by an integration process produces a smooth contoured integrated pulse 48. The inte¬ grated pulse is then shaped into a bipolar pulse by lead network 36 and after being amplified by the amplifier 38 emerges as an amplified bipolar pulse 50 which is fed to the pulse height analyzer 46. Each time the pulse analyzer receives an enable signal 44 and a corresponding bipolar pulse 50 which satisfies the pulse height criteria set in the ana¬ lyzer an output count 52 is produced. Each output count corresponds to a nuclear disintegration of interest which caused an optical pulse 16 from the scintillator and is transmitted to the microproces- sor circuitry for proper analysis of the data.
A flow cell 54 for use with the present inven¬ tion is shown in Fig. 4. The cell comprises a glass-walled centerpiece 56 having a filter element 58 at each end as is filled with a fine mesh solid scintillator material 60 such as calcium fluoride
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or any of a number of glass scintillators. Inlet tube 62 and outlet tube 64 deliver and carry away respectively the fluid containing the radioactive material of interest. Typical dimensions for the cell are two inches in length, eight millimeters outside diameter and a two to five millimeter in¬ side diameter. The tubes are metal with chroma- tographic grade end fittings and filters and the scintillator particles are smaller than one hundred eighty mesh. With this apparatus a flow rate of one quarter to two milliliters per minute is main¬ tained and results in a pressure drop of fifty to three hundred pounds per square inch between the filter elements. The flow cell is used in co junc- tion with a high efficiency reflector to maximize the photon flux which reaches the photomultiplier tube. The system may also be utilized to measure radioactivity in gas streams.
The invention has been described in terms of calcium fluoride and glass scintillator although the concept is workable with sodium iodide or any other long decay time scintillator material solid or liquid, i.e., one having an output photon burst which is long in comparison with the pulse interval of photomultiplier tube noise.
I have described a preferred embodiment of my invention and some variations thereto and therefore I seek Letters Patent issued by the United States of America directed to my invention which I claim as :
Claims
Claims
1. A radiation assay instrument comprising: a solid scintillator for providing pulses of photons in response to interaction with radi- ation; photomultiplier tube means to receive the photons from the scintillator and provide an electric output signal; reflector means for collecting photons from the scintillator which would not otherwise directly impinge on the photomultiplier tube face and for redirecting them into the photo¬ multiplier tube face; and circuitry having two parallel electric paths and including, along a first of the parallel electric paths - integrator means for changing the profile of the electric output sig- nal provided by the photomultiplier tube to a smooth contour signal, along a second of the parallel electric paths - differentiator means for reducing each electric output signal provided by the photomultiplier tube to a sequence of component photon response pulses which comprise the electric output signal, and burst identifier means for interrogating the sequence of component photon response pulses, and providing an enable signal for each occurrence of a sequence
-BURE
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- ii -
consisting of more than one component photon response pulses that occur within a specified time interval and pulse height analyzation means for - receiving the smooth contour signals from the pulse integrator means, receiving the enable signals from the burst identifier, and providing an output count signal for each occurrence of an enable signal and a corresponding smooth contour signal whose pulse height satisfies specified amplitude requirements.
2. The invention according to Claim 1 wherein the sequence of component photon response pulses con¬ sists of three pulses.
3. The method of assaying radiation from a sample comprising: locating the sample adjacent to a solid scintilla¬ tor to allow the radioactive particles from the sample to interact with the scintillator thereby producing photons; collecting the photons with a photomultiplier tube to produce an electric output signal; dividing each such electric output signal into identical at least first and second split elec¬ tric output signals; integrating the first split electric output signal to provide a smooth contour signal; differentiating the second split electric out¬ put signal to reduce such second signal to the sequence of component photon response pulses;
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interrogating the sequence of component photon response pulses with a burst identifier to de¬ termine if the sequence contains at least three components occuring within seven hundred and fifty nanoseconds; providing with theburst identifier an enable signal to a pulse height analyzer each time a second split electric output signal is deter¬ mined to have at least three component photon response pulses occurring within seven hundred and fifty nanoseconds; coordinating the arrival of an enable signal in the pulse height analyzer with the arrival of any smooth contour signal which is determined by the pulse height analyzer to have a pulse height that satisfies preselected amplitude requirements; and providing an output count from the pulse height analyzer each time a smooth contour pulse is correlated to an enable pulse.
4. A radiation assay instrument comprising: a solid scintillator for providing pulses of photons in response to interaction with radia¬ tion; photomultiplier tube means to receive the pho¬ tons from the scintillator and provide an elec¬ tric output signal; reflector means for collecting photons from the scintillator which would not otherwise directly impinge on the photomultiplier tube face and for redirecting them into the photomultiplier tube face; and circuitry having two parallel electric paths and including.
along a first of parallel electric paths - integrator means for changing the profile of the electric output signal provided by the photomultiplier tube 5 to a smooth contour signal, along a second of the parallel electric paths - differentiator means for reducing each electric output signal provided by the 10 photomultiplier tube to a sequence of component photon response pulses which comprise the electric output signal, and burst identifier means for 15 interrogating the sequence of component photon response pulses, and providing an enable signal for each occurrence of overlapping 20 photon response pulses which is greater than about two hundred nanoseconds duration, and pulse height analyzation means for - receiving the smooth contour signals 25 from the pulse integrator means, receiving the enable signals from the burst identifier, and providing an output count signal for each occurrence of an enable signal 30 and a corresponding smooth contour signal whose pulse height satisfies specified amplitude requirements.
OMP « W1PC
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/US1983/001479 WO1985001584A1 (en) | 1983-09-27 | 1983-09-27 | Method and apparatus for measuring radioactive decay |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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EP0156801A1 EP0156801A1 (en) | 1985-10-09 |
EP0156801A4 true EP0156801A4 (en) | 1987-01-20 |
Family
ID=22175453
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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EP19830903332 Withdrawn EP0156801A4 (en) | 1983-09-27 | 1983-09-27 | Method and apparatus for measuring radioactive decay. |
Country Status (4)
Country | Link |
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EP (1) | EP0156801A4 (en) |
DE (1) | DE156801T1 (en) |
FI (1) | FI852092A0 (en) |
WO (1) | WO1985001584A1 (en) |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
FI91024C (en) * | 1991-11-08 | 1994-04-25 | Wallac Oy | Method for measuring samples with a liquid scintillation counter and a liquid scintillation counter |
Citations (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4251744A (en) * | 1978-08-04 | 1981-02-17 | General Electric Company | Pulse conversion circuit |
Family Cites Families (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3842278A (en) * | 1973-01-08 | 1974-10-15 | J Noakes | Liquid scintillation unit with low background noise |
FR2331797A1 (en) * | 1975-11-17 | 1977-06-10 | Intertechnique Sa | IMPROVEMENTS TO COUNTING METHODS AND DEVICES, ESPECIALLY LIQUID SPARKLING METERING |
US4071761A (en) * | 1976-06-07 | 1978-01-31 | Beckman Instruments, Inc. | Method for determining random coincidence count rate in a scintillation counter utilizing the coincidence technique |
-
1983
- 1983-09-27 WO PCT/US1983/001479 patent/WO1985001584A1/en not_active Application Discontinuation
- 1983-09-27 DE DE1983903332 patent/DE156801T1/en active Pending
- 1983-09-27 EP EP19830903332 patent/EP0156801A4/en not_active Withdrawn
-
1985
- 1985-05-24 FI FI852092A patent/FI852092A0/en not_active Application Discontinuation
Patent Citations (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US4251744A (en) * | 1978-08-04 | 1981-02-17 | General Electric Company | Pulse conversion circuit |
Non-Patent Citations (1)
Title |
---|
See also references of WO8501584A1 * |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
FI852092L (en) | 1985-05-24 |
FI852092A0 (en) | 1985-05-24 |
WO1985001584A1 (en) | 1985-04-11 |
DE156801T1 (en) | 1985-12-19 |
EP0156801A1 (en) | 1985-10-09 |
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