November 1, 2009
Journal Article

Effects of high count rate and gain shift on isotope identification algorithms

Abstract

Spectroscopic gamma-ray detectors are used for many research, industrial, and homeland- security applications. Thallium-doped sodium iodide, (NaI(Tl)), scintillation crystals coupled to photomultiplier tubes provide medium-resolution spectral data about the surrounding environment. NaI(Tl)-based detectors, paired with spectral identification algorithms, are often effective for identifying gamma-ray sources by isotope. However, intrinsic limitations for NaI(Tl) systems exist, including gain shifts and spectral marring (e.g., loss of resolution and count-rate saturation) at high count rates. These effects are hardware dependent and have strong effects on the radioisotopic identification capability of NaI(Tl)-based systems. In this work, the effects of high count rate on the response of isotope-identification algorithms are explored. It is shown that a small gain shift of a few tens of keV is sufficient to disturb identification. The onset of this and other spectral effects is estimated for NaI(Tl) crystals, and a mechanism for mitigating these effects by estimating and correcting for them is implemented and evaluated.

Revised: December 3, 2009 | Published: November 1, 2009

Citation

Robinson S.M., S.D. Kiff, E.D. Ashbaker, E.L. Flumerfelt, and M. Salvitti. 2009. Effects of high count rate and gain shift on isotope identification algorithms. Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research. Section A, Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment 610, no. 2:509-514. PNNL-SA-67219. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2009.08.063