Abstract

A large volume gamma spectrometer was designed and constructed to analyze foodstuffs and environmental samples having low radionuclide concentrations. This system uses eight 11-cm × 42.5-cm × 5.5-cm NaI(Tl) detectors, chosen due to their relatively high sensitivity and availability and arranged in an octagonal configuration. The sensitive volume of the system is ~28 cm in diameter and ~42 cm deep. Shielding consists of an 86-cm × 86-cm square, 64-cm-tall lead brick enclosure with 18-cm-thick lead walls lined by 0.3-cm-thick copper plates. An aluminum top was machined to suspend the detectors within this shield. The shielding reduces background counts by 72% at 100 keV and 42% at 1,000 keV. The positional variability in sensitivity of the well was determined by both simulation and experiment. A 2.1-L volume of nearly uniform sensitivity, varying less than 10%, exists in the well's center. Energy resolutions of 14.6% and 7.8% were measured for Am and Cs, respectively. Energy resolution shows a 0.2% variation for both Am and Cs as a function of position within all regions of the well's central sensitive volume. Dead time was also determined to be less than 35% for all sources measured in the system, the largest of which had an activity of 1,760 kBq. Simulated results for various source geometries show higher counts for smaller samples, especially at lower energies due to less attenuation of low energy photons. Minimum detectable activities were determined for all source energies used, less than 5.1 Bq kg for reasonable background and sample counting times.

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