1–5 Sept 2008
University of Glasgow
Europe/London timezone

Time-Resolved Neutron Imaging System Using a High-Frame-Rate CMOS Camera for TOF Neutron Radiography

5 Sept 2008, 10:40
50m
University of Glasgow

University of Glasgow

Glasgow G12 8QQ UK
Board: 54
Poster Detectors for Synchrotron Radiation and Spallation Neutron Sources Poster Session 4 - Synchrotron Detectors and Pixel Detectors

Speaker

Tatsuya Nakamura (Japan Atomic Energy Agency)

Description

An effective pixel size of a two-dimensional wavelength shifting fibre (WLSF) neutron image detector was improved from 0.5 mm down to 0.17 mm with implementing a fibre optic taper (FOT). The main part of the prototype detector consisted with a thin ZnS/6LiF screen, the FOT, and the crossed WLSF ribbons for x and y coordinate. The WLSF image detector had 16 x 16 fibre channels and the light signals in each fibre were read out individually. The FOT that was made out of fine glass fibres with a taper ratio of 3.1 was implemented in between a scintillator screen and the WLS fibres, which worked as an image magnifier. The original detector that equipped with a scintillator screen without a FOT exhibited a spatial resolution of around 0.8 mm. The spatial resolution of this detector was dominated with a light disperse in the screen and the side length of a fibre of 0.5 mm. The prototype detector equipped with the FOT measured a narrow neutron beam with a finer pixel size whilst the same WLSF were used for readout. This result indicated a possibility to improve the effective pixel size / spatial resolution with a FOT device. This kind of detector would be quite unique and useful for energy-selective neuron radiography at a pulsed neutron source because of its neutron counting capability.

Author

Tatsuya Nakamura (Japan Atomic Energy Agency)

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