A PIELD-DEPLOYABLE GAMMA-RAY SPECTROMETER UTILIZING XENON AT HIGH PRESSURE*

Year
1996
Author(s)
Graham C. Smith, - Brookhaven National Laboratory
George J. Mahler - Brookhaven National Laboratory
Bo Yu - Brookhaven National Laboratory
Cynthia Salwen, - Brookhaven National Laboratory
James R. Lemley - Brookhaven National Laboratory
Abstract
Prototype gamma-ray spectrometers utilizing xenon gas at high pressure, suitable for applications in the nuclear safeguards, arms control, and nonproliferation communities, have been developed at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). These spectrometers function as ambient-temperature ionization chambers detecting gamma rays with good efficiency in the energy range 50 keV - 2 MeV, with an energy resolution intermediate between semiconductor (Ge) and scintillation (NaI) spectrometers. They are capable of prolonged, low-power operation without a requirement for cryogenic fluids or other cooling mechanisms, and with the addition of small quantities of 3He gas, can function simultaneously as efficient thermal neutron detectors.