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Development of a low background liquid scintillation counter for a shallow underground laboratory

Authors :
Erchinger, J. L.
Aalseth, C. E.
Bernacki, B. E.
Douglas, M.
Fuller, E. S.
Keillor, M. E.
Morley, S. M.
Mullen, C. A.
Orrell, J. L.
Panisko, M. E.
Warren, G. A.
Williams, R. O.
Wright, M. E.
Source :
Applied Radiation and Isotopes, Volume 105, November 2015, Pages 209-218
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory has recently opened a shallow underground laboratory intended for measurement of low-concentration levels of radioactive isotopes in samples collected from the environment. The development of a low-background liquid scintillation counter is currently underway to further augment the measurement capabilities within this underground laboratory. Liquid scintillation counting is especially useful for measuring charged particle (e.g., $\beta$, $\alpha$) emitting isotopes with no (or very weak) gamma-ray yields. The combination of high-efficiency detection of charged particle emission in a liquid scintillation cocktail coupled with the low-background environment of an appropriately-designed shield located in a clean underground laboratory provides the opportunity for increased-sensitivity measurements of a range of isotopes. To take advantage of the 35 meters-water-equivalent overburden of the underground laboratory, a series of simulations have evaluated the scintillation counter's shield design requirements to assess the possible background rate achievable. This report presents the design and background evaluation for a shallow underground, low background liquid scintillation counter design for sample measurements.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Applied Radiation and Isotopes, Volume 105, November 2015, Pages 209-218
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1512.06477
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apradiso.2015.08.027