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Measurement of LYSO Intrinsic Light Yield Using Electron Excitation

The determination of the intrinsic light yield (LY int ) of scintillating crystals, i.e. number of optical photons created per amount of energy deposited, constitutes a key factor in order to characterize and optimize their energy and time resolution. However, until now measurements of this quantity...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IEEE transactions on nuclear science 2016-04, Vol.63 (2), p.475-479
Main Authors: Martinez Turtos, Rosana, Gundacker, Stefan, Pizzichemi, Marco, Ghezzi, Alessio, Pauwels, Kristof, Auffray, Etiennette, Lecoq, Paul, Paganoni, Marco
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The determination of the intrinsic light yield (LY int ) of scintillating crystals, i.e. number of optical photons created per amount of energy deposited, constitutes a key factor in order to characterize and optimize their energy and time resolution. However, until now measurements of this quantity are affected by large uncertainties and often rely on corrections for bulk absorption and surface/edge state. The novel idea presented in this contribution is based on the confinement of the scintillation emission in the central upper part of a 10 mm cubic crystal using a 1.5 MeV electron beam with diameter of 1 mm. A black non-reflective pinhole aligned with the excitation point is used to fix the light extraction solid angle (narrower than total reflection angle), which then sets a light cone travel path through the crystal. The final number of photoelectrons detected using a Hamamatsu R2059 photomultiplier tube (PMT) was corrected for the extraction solid angle, the Fresnel reflection coefficient and quantum efficiency (QE) of the PMT. The total number of optical photons produced per energy deposited was found to be 40000 ph/MeV ± 9% (syst) ±3% (stat) for LYSO. Simulations using Geant4 were successfully compared to light output measurements of 2 × 2 mm 2 section crystals with lengths of 5-30 mm, in order to validate the light transport model and set a limit on Light Transfer Efficiency estimations.
ISSN:0018-9499
1558-1578
DOI:10.1109/TNS.2016.2527738