학술논문

Neutron Response of the EJ-254 Boron-Loaded Plastic Scintillator
Document Type
article
Source
IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science. 68(1)
Subject
Light yield
neutron capture
neutron detector
nuclear recoil
organic scintillator
Atomic
Molecular
Nuclear
Particle and Plasma Physics
Other Physical Sciences
Biomedical Engineering
Nuclear & Particles Physics
Language
Abstract
Organic scintillators doped with capture agents provide a detectable signal for neutrons over a broad energy range. This work characterizes the fast and slow neutron response of EJ-254, an organic plastic scintillator with 5% natural boron loading by weight. For fast neutrons, the primary mechanism for light generation in organic scintillators is n-p elastic scattering. To study the fast neutron response, the proton light yield of EJ-254 was measured at the 88-Inch Cyclotron at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Using a broad-spectrum neutron source and a double time-of-flight technique, the EJ-254 proton light yield was obtained over the energy range of approximately 270 keV to 4.5 MeV and determined to be in agreement with other plastic scintillators comprised of the same polymer base. To isolate the slow neutron response, an AmBe source with polyethylene moderator was made incident on the EJ-254 scintillator surrounded by an array of EJ-309 observation detectors. Events in the EJ-254 target coincident with the signature 477.6 keV $\gamma $ ray (resulting from deexcitation of the residual 7Li nucleus following boron neutron capture) were identified. Pulse shape discrimination was used to evaluate the temporal differences in the response of EJ-254 scintillation signals arising from $\gamma $ -ray and fast/slow neutron interactions. Clear separation between $\gamma $ -ray and fast neutron signals was not achieved and the neutron-capture feature was observed to overlap both the $\gamma $ -ray and fast neutron bands. Taking into account the electron light nonproportionality, the neutron-capture light yield in EJ-254 was determined to be 89.4 ± 1.1 keVee.