학술논문

Detection of radiocarbon in the cyclotrino
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Conference: 5. international conference on accelerator mass spectrometry, Paris (France), 23-27 Apr 1990
Subject
37 INORGANIC, ORGANIC, PHYSICAL AND ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
43 PARTICLE ACCELERATORS
73 NUCLEAR PHYSICS AND RADIATION PHYSICS CARBON 14
DETECTION
BEAM EXTRACTION
CARBON IONS
CYCLOTRONS
DESIGN
ION SOURCES
ISOTOPE DATING
MASS SPECTROSCOPY
ACCELERATORS
AGE ESTIMATION
BETA DECAY RADIOISOTOPES
BETA-MINUS DECAY RADIOISOTOPES
CARBON ISOTOPES
CHARGED PARTICLES
CYCLIC ACCELERATORS
EVEN-EVEN NUCLEI
IONS
ISOTOPES
LIGHT NUCLEI
NUCLEI
RADIOISOTOPES
SPECTROSCOPY
YEARS LIVING RADIOISOTOPES 400800* -- Combustion, Pyrolysis, & High-Temperature Chemistry
430100 -- Particle Accelerators-- Design, Development, & Operation
651100 -- Nuclear Physics-- Experimental Techniques-- (1980-)
Language
English
Abstract
A small low energy cyclotron (the cyclotrino''), which was proposed for direct detection of radiocarbon in 1980, has now detected radiocarbon at natural abundance. This device combines the suppression of background through the use of negative ions with the high intrinsic mass resolution of a cyclotron. A high current cesium sputter negative ion source generates a beam of carbon ions which is pre-separated with Wien filter and is transported to the cyclotron via a series of electrostatic lenses. Beam is injected radially into the cyclotron using electrostatic deflectors and an electrostatic mirror. Axial focusing is entirely electrostatic. A microchannel plate detector is used with a phase-gated output. Data is presented showing resolution of radiocarbon at natural abundance. In its present form the system is capable of improving the sensitivity of detecting {sup 14}C in some biomedical experiments by a factor of 10{sup 4}. Modifications are discussed which could bring about an additional factor of 100 in sensitivity, which is important for archaeological and geological applications. Possibilities for measurements of other isotopes are discussed. 16 refs., 7 figs.