Publications

Characterization and improvement of thin natural diamond detectors for spectrometry of heavy ions below 1 MeV/amu

Author(s)
Peter Steier, Vitaly Kh Liechtenstein, Denia Djokic, Robin Golser, Anton Wallner, A.G. Alexeev, V.S. Khrunov, Walter Kutschera
Abstract

In our previous paper [V.Kh. Liechtenstein, N.V. Eremin, R. Golser, W. Kutschera, A.A. Paskhalov, A. Priller, P. Steier, Ch. Vockenhuber, S. Winkler, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A 521 (2004) 2031, first results on the evaluation of thin natural diamond-based detectors (NDDs) as an energy spectrometer for heavy ions in the energy range below 1 MeV/amu were presented. Although results were promising, the energy resolution of the detector was limited by an unexpected high-energy loss in the "dead layer" of the entrance window. In this paper, we report a significant improvement in the spectrometric properties of two highly selected and carefully treated NDDs with electrical contacts made of carbon and gold films as thin as about 10 and 20 mu g/cm(2), respectively, instead of much thicker aluminum contacts used before. In particular, for the NDD with thin carbon contact an energy resolution of 7.6% for Au-197-ions at 20.6 MeV was obtained. The energy cut-off of the detectors was reduced to 0.9 and 1.5 MeV for carbon and gold contact, respectively. The measured data on energy cut-off for different projectiles are compared with calculations, which yields an estimate of the thickness of the dead layers. Long-term irradiation runs proved stable spectroscopic performance of the detectors, in spite of the inherent "pumping" effects and imperfections of pulse height distributions. Our data suggest that NDD-based spectrometers might outperform other detector types in applications where very fast detectors with high radiation tolerance are required.

Organisation(s)
Isotope Physics
External organisation(s)
Russian Research Centre Kurchatov Institute, Troitsk Institute for Innovation and Fusion Research, Institute for Physical and Technical Problems
Journal
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research. Section A. Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors, and Associated Equipment
Volume
590
Pages
221-226
No. of pages
6
ISSN
0168-9002
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2008.02.038
Publication date
2008
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
1030 Physics, Astronomy, 103014 Nuclear physics
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/b6aaf840-cc39-4ac6-9f29-73ff5f414537