Publications by authors named "Hurlbut C"

A LiF:ZnS(Ag) based cold neutron detector with wavelength shifting (WLS) fibers and SiPM photodetector was developed at the NIST Center for Neutron Research for the CANDoR instrument (Chromatic Analysis Neutron Diffractometer or Reflectometer). A series of detectors were irradiated with neutron doses ranging between 1E+11 n/cm to 6E+12 n/cm. It was found that the neutron absorbing Li isotope was not measurably depleted, but the photonic yield of the detector deteriorated with increasing neutron dose.

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We used Gaussian separation and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves to optimize the neutron sensitivity and gamma rejection of an ultra-thin LiF:ZnS(Ag)-scintillator-based neutron detector paired with a silicon photomultiplier (SiPM). We recorded the waveforms while operating the detector in a monochromatic cold neutron beam and in the presence of isotopic Cs and Co gamma sources. We used a two-window charge comparison (CC) pulse-shape discrimination (PSD) technique to distinguish the neutron capture events from other types of signals.

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The design of a new fast-gated neutron imaging system for the National Ignition Facility with much stricter timing constraints than a previous system has prompted the search for a fast scintillator material that can be used in imaging. A novel imaging cell based on Liquid VI has recently been developed with Eljen Technology and characterized at the Special Technologies Laboratory and the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center. The results show superior timing characteristics and spatial resolution, and sufficient light production for the new system compared to fast plastic scintillators previously used in neutron imaging.

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We describe the design, fabrication, and performance of an energy analyzing detector package for cold neutron spectrometers at the NIST Center for Neutron Research (NCNR). The detector package consists of arrays of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite crystals set at takeoff angles corresponding to different neutron energies. Neutrons incident down the array will be selected out by the appropriate crystal and directed onto an associated neutron detector.

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The Neutron Imaging System has proven to be an important diagnostic in studying DT implosion characteristics at the National Ignition Facility. The current system depends on a polystyrene scintillating fiber array, which detects fusion neutrons born in the DT hotspot as well as neutrons that have scattered to lower energies in the surrounding cold fuel. Increasing neutron yields at NIF, as well as a desire to resolve three-dimensional information about the fuel assembly, have provided the impetus to build and install two additional next-generation neutron imaging systems.

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Conventional neutron rem meters currently in use are based on 1960's technology that relies on a large neutron moderator assembly surrounding a thermal detector to achieve a rem-like response function over a limited energy range. Such rem meters present an ergonomic challenge, being heavy and bulky, and have caused injuries during radiation protection surveys. Another defect of traditional rem meters is a poor high-energy response above 10 MeV, which makes them unsuitable for applications at high-energy accelerator facilities.

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Despite recent advances in radiochromic film and gel dosimetry techniques, radiation therapy still lacks an efficient, accurate, and convenient dose measurement method capable of measuring the dose simultaneously over a plane or a volume (3D). A possibility for creating such a 3D method based on observing scintillation photons emitted from an irradiated volume was recently reported [A. S.

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Plastic scintillator (PS) has been proposed for both one- and two-dimensional (1D and 2D) dose measurements for radiation therapy applications. For low-energy photon modalities (e.g.

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