Year
2023
File Attachment
Abstract
To combat the risk of nuclear smuggling, radiography systems are deployed at ports to scan cargo containers
for concealed illicit materials. Dual energy radiography systems enable a rough elemental analysis of cargo
containers due to the Z-dependence of photon attenuation, allowing for improved material detection. This
work studies the capabilities for atomic number discrimination using dual energy MeV systems by considering
dual energy {6, 4} MeV, {10, 6} MeV, and {10, 4} MeV bremsstrahlung beams. Results of this analysis
show that two different materials can sometimes produce identical transparency measurements, leading to
a fundamental ambiguity when differentiating between materials of different atomic numbers. Previous
literature has observed this property, but the extent of the limitation is poorly understood and the cause of
the degeneracy is generally inadequately explained. This non-uniqueness property stems from competition
between photoelectric absorption and pair production and is present even in systems with perfect resolution
and zero statistical noise. These findings are validated through Monte Carlo transparency simulations.
Results of this study show that currently deployed commercial radiographic systems are fundamentally
incapable of distinguishing between high-Z nuclear materials and miscellaneous mid-Z cargo contents.