The exploitation of visible radiophotoluminescence in lithium fluoride (LiF) crystals, due to local aggregate point defects produced by ionizing radiation in the crystal lattice, is demonstrated for fluorescent imaging of single tracks of protons at low energies. LiF crystals were irradiated perpendicularly with respect to nearly monochromatic, collimated proton beams at the energies of about 1 MeV in a fluence range from ∼5.8 × 105 p/cm2 up to ∼3.4 × 107 p/cm2 and of about 2.6 MeV in a fluence range from ∼9.6 × 105 p/cm2 up to ∼4.7 × 106 p/cm2. The fluence values were estimated by detecting and automatically counting the tracks on the images acquired with a fluorescence microscope at high magnification; they were found to be in agreement with those obtained using CR39 plastic detectors irradiated under the same experimental conditions. Despite the very short range in matter of these charged particles, by focusing the excitation blue light at discrete depths in the irradiated LiF crystals, an estimate of the proton energies was also obtained. These first results are encouraging for the utilization of LiF crystals as fluorescent nuclear track detectors under typical conditions employed in ion radiobiology.
Detection of fluorescent low-energy proton tracks in lithium fluoride crystals
Piccinini, Massimo;Nichelatti, Enrico;Nigro, Valentina;Vincenti, Maria Aurora;Ronsivalle, Concetta;Ampollini, Alessandro;Montereali, Rosa Maria
2024-01-01
Abstract
The exploitation of visible radiophotoluminescence in lithium fluoride (LiF) crystals, due to local aggregate point defects produced by ionizing radiation in the crystal lattice, is demonstrated for fluorescent imaging of single tracks of protons at low energies. LiF crystals were irradiated perpendicularly with respect to nearly monochromatic, collimated proton beams at the energies of about 1 MeV in a fluence range from ∼5.8 × 105 p/cm2 up to ∼3.4 × 107 p/cm2 and of about 2.6 MeV in a fluence range from ∼9.6 × 105 p/cm2 up to ∼4.7 × 106 p/cm2. The fluence values were estimated by detecting and automatically counting the tracks on the images acquired with a fluorescence microscope at high magnification; they were found to be in agreement with those obtained using CR39 plastic detectors irradiated under the same experimental conditions. Despite the very short range in matter of these charged particles, by focusing the excitation blue light at discrete depths in the irradiated LiF crystals, an estimate of the proton energies was also obtained. These first results are encouraging for the utilization of LiF crystals as fluorescent nuclear track detectors under typical conditions employed in ion radiobiology.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
---|---|---|---|
Piccinini_2024.pdf
accesso aperto
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
9.46 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
9.46 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.