Paper
3 June 2011 An air fluorescence imaging system for the detection of radiological contamination
Elizabeth Inrig, Lorne Erhardt, Vernon Koslowsky, Bob Andrews, Harry Ing, Michael Dick, Patrick Forget
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
On-site detection and measurement of the activity and extent of alpha (α) contamination presents a significant challenge to radiation detection personnel. Due to the short range of these particles, conventional detection techniques involve bringing a probe within a few centimetres of the suspect area. Performing a thorough survey of an area is a time consuming, painstaking, and potentially dangerous task, as personnel may be exposed to harmful radiation. Conventional detectors may have fragile Mylar windows which are highly prone to breakage. The instrumentation under development employs a novel approach: instead of detecting the radiation directly, it detects radiation-induced air fluorescence surrounding the contaminated area. Optical imaging is used to determine the spatial extent of the contamination, providing a much more rapid, accurate and robust tool for in-situ contamination measurements. A mobile, near-field, wide-angle, fast optical system has been designed and constructed to detect and image this radiation-induced air fluorescence. It incorporates large-area position-sensitive photo-multiplier tubes, UV filters, a specially constructed fast electronic shutter, and an aspherical phase mask to significantly increase the instrument's depth-of-field. First tests indicate that a 0.3 μCi α source can be detected in less than 10 seconds at a standoff distance of 1.5 meters.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Elizabeth Inrig, Lorne Erhardt, Vernon Koslowsky, Bob Andrews, Harry Ing, Michael Dick, and Patrick Forget "An air fluorescence imaging system for the detection of radiological contamination", Proc. SPIE 8018, Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosives (CBRNE) Sensing XII, 80180G (3 June 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.887352
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Luminescence

Contamination

Sensors

Imaging systems

Data acquisition

Ultraviolet radiation

Camera shutters

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