An active dose-measuring device for X-rays generated by ultra-short, ultra-intense laser pulses

JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION(2023)

引用 0|浏览9
暂无评分
摘要
Ultra-short, ultra-intense laser pulses can create extreme physical conditions for a wide range of applications in atomic and molecular physics, materials chemistry, and inertial-confinement fusion. However, laser-matter interactions can be accompanied by significant X-ray emission that introduces radiation risks to the nearby environment and personnel. It is usually to monitor the radiation dose during in high-intensity laser-target interactions with optically stimulated luminescence and thermo-luminescence devices. However, these passive methods cannot measure the radiation dose in real time, while most active dosimeters cannot accurately measure pulsed radiation doses. Here, transient pulse X-ray radiation doses are converted by CdWO4 crystals into slow signals. Because the crystals have a 14-mu s luminescence decay time, they can absorb sub-nanosecond X-ray pulses and release the energy at a 100-mu s rate, thus reducing the linear-response pressure of subsequent devices. A pulse detector based on a CdWO4 crystal, a phototube, and a custom signal-processing circuit was developed. Experiments were performed at the 45-TW femtosecond laser facility of the Laser Fusion Research Center. The detector deviation was less than +/- 20% relative to that of an ionization-chamber detector. This initially verified its feasibility for real-time pulsed X-ray radiation detection.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Detector design and construction technologies and materials,Radiation damage monitoring systems,X-ray detectors,Models and simulations
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要