The role of the secondary fluorophore in ternary plastic scintillators aiming at discriminating fast neutrons from gamma-rays

2019 
Abstract Since Helium-3 shortage announcement, organic scintillators play a major role in neutron detection. Our laboratory decided to focus on plastic scintillators and their ability to discriminate fast neutrons from gamma rays. In this work, we highlight the influence of the secondary fluorophore in lab-made plastic scintillators. The secondary fluorophore is generally added in the scintillating mixture to shift the emission wavelength towards the transparency domain of the material to improve its attenuation length. Thus, it is considered as a harmless molecule and is barely seen as a key criterion that could enhance the performances of the organic scintillator. In our work, we demonstrate that this molecule, even added at a small concentration (typically in the range 0.02–0.2 wt%), directly impacts the neutron/gamma discrimination ability of plastics. Not only the secondary fluorophore plays a role in self-absorption of the scintillating material, but also the couple it creates with the primary fluorophore has to be carefully chosen, as some specific triplet energy transfers between the two fluorophores can influence the neutron/gamma discrimination abilities of the plastic scintillator. Aside from classical photophysical inconveniences such as self-absorption or diffusion, the possibility that the whole, bulk material was heterogeneous in a photochemical point of view was also checked. Thus, various samples were cut from bulk monoliths and their pulse shape discrimination compared with the parent scintillator in terms of Figure of Merit and light output.
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