Abstract

Abstract. The dose rate of the 90Sr / 90Y beta source used in most luminescence readers is a laboratory key parameter. There is a well-established body of knowledge about parameters controlling accuracy and precision of the calibration value but some hard-to-explain inconsistencies still exist. Here, we have investigated the impact of grain size, aliquot size and irradiation geometry on the resulting calibration value through experiments and simulations. The resulting data indicate that the dose rate of an individual beta source results from the interplay of a number of parameters, most of which are well established by previous studies. Our study provides evidence for the impact of aliquot size on the absorbed dose in particular for grain sizes of 50–200 µm. For this grain-size fraction, the absorbed dose is enhanced by ∼ 10 %–20 % as aliquot size decreases due to the radial increase of dose rate towards the centre of the aliquot. The enhancement is most variable for 50–100 µm grains mounted as aliquots of < 8 mm size. The enhancement is reversed when large grains are mounted as small aliquots due to the edge effect by which the dose induced by backscattered electrons is reduced. While the build-up of charge dictates the increase of absorbed dose with the increase of grain size, this principle becomes more variable with changing irradiation geometry. We conclude that future calibration samples should consist of subsamples composed of small, medium, large and very large quartz grains, each obtaining several gamma doses. The calibration value measured with small, medium and large aliquots is then obtained from the inverse slope of the fitted line, not from a single data point. In this way, all possible irradiation geometries of an individual beta source are covered, and the precision of the calibration is improved.

Highlights

  • The dose rate of the 90Sr / 90Y beta source used in most luminescence readers is a laboratory key parameter

  • Small-to-large differences between samples are evident from the experimental data which are not systematic but seem to depend on measurement parameters and, eventually, on the calculation of the gamma dose (Tribolo et al, 2019)

  • Tribolo et al (2019) identified an up-to-14 % difference of dose rate between samples when analysing single grains of the same calibration samples used here (F14_90; R113_180; Table 2). This was subsequently reduced as a result of one of the manufacturers changing their gamma-dose calculation which is still subject to ongoing research (Martin Autzen, personal communication, June 2021)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The dose rate of the 90Sr / 90Y beta source used in most luminescence readers is a laboratory key parameter. Past studies have established that charge build-up, attenuation and backscatter constitute the physical mechanisms controlling the dose absorbed in the sample’s mineral grain The interplay of these mechanisms depends on mineral type (Aitken, 1985), on grain transparency (Bell and Mejdahl, 1981), beta-source-to-grain distance (Wintle and Aitken, 1977), grain size (Goedicke, 2007; Armitage and Bailey, 2005; Mauz and Lang, 2004) and the sample carrier’s substrate (Greilich et al, 2008; Armitage and Bailey, 2005; Mauz and Lang, 2004; Wintle and Aitken, 1977). Despite this wellestablished body of knowledge, Hansen et al (2015) note

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call