Characterization of the response of a PHDs GeGI to enable quantitative assay of nuclear materials
POSTER
Abstract
Passive nondestructive assay of the presence and/or amount of nuclear or radiological materials present in an item is a key technique for nuclear safeguards, forensics, and consequence management. Portable gamma-ray detector systems, like PHD’s GeGi High-Purity Germanium (HPGe) gamma-ray imager are used for onsite screening for some of these missions but are not well understood when analyzing complex nuclear materials quantitatively. Characterizing the full energy photo-peak (FEP) efficiency curve and the cascade summing corrections are key to accurate quantitative analysis when using portable spectrometers. This is typically done in concert with energy calibration across a wide range using standardized radioactive sources.
Monte Carlo simulations were performed using G4ARES, a Geant4 framework for nuclear particle transport, to model FEP efficiency curves with key parameters of the HPGe crystal and surrounding materials. A variety of experimental data gathered from these Geant4 simulations was compared to the models utilizing a data processing framework developed using CERN’s ROOT toolset, and the detector's parameters were optimized until the efficiency curves agreed within uncertainties.
Monte Carlo simulations were performed using G4ARES, a Geant4 framework for nuclear particle transport, to model FEP efficiency curves with key parameters of the HPGe crystal and surrounding materials. A variety of experimental data gathered from these Geant4 simulations was compared to the models utilizing a data processing framework developed using CERN’s ROOT toolset, and the detector's parameters were optimized until the efficiency curves agreed within uncertainties.
*Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is operated for the U.S. Department of Energy by Battelle under Contract DE-AC05-76RL01830. This work was funded by the Office of Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation Research and Development within the U.S. Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect the opinion of the United States Government, the United States Department of Energy or Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Presenters
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Scott C Garner
- Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University (FAMU)