Year
2023
File Attachment
Abstract
The capability of performing radiological monitoring of large areas using a lightweight,
rapidly mountable gamma detection system is demonstrated. The system was
designed to deliver radiological information such as count rate, dose rate and gamma
energy spectra to first responders in response to a nuclear / radiological incident. The
“Flat Panel” gamma detector, developed by Arktis Radiation Detectors, relies on plastic
scintillation and Silicon Photomultiplier light readout: this solution maximizes
performance in terms of efficiency per unit weight, while being highly insensitive to
electromagnetic fields, vibrations, and mechanical shocks. With a single flight
autonomy of more than 20 minutes, the capability of scanning large areas in
radionuclide-localization missions is demonstrated by means of field tests performed
at the Spiez CBRN Laboratory in Switzerland. In each test, gamma-emitting
radionuclide sources with activities from hundreds of MBq to few GBq and energies
ranging from 60 keV to 1.3 MeV have been deployed in a field of 15’000 m2 and flight
patterns at different speed and altitude are carried out in order to assess detection
limits. Dose rate heat-maps are generated for different incident gamma energies to
validate a dose rate calculation algorithm based on spectroscopic analysis. The
measurement results show that the system can reliably localise radionuclide sources in
large-area scans in less than 20 minutes, while providing dosimetric and spectroscopic
information to first responders to allow real-time assessment of radiological risks.