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Crystal Growth and Scintillation Properties of ${\rm Cs}_{2}{\rm NaGdBr}_{6}{:}{\rm Ce}^{3+}$

IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science

Doty, Fred P.; Zhou, Xiaowang Z.; Deng, Haoran D.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

Single crystals of Cs2NaGdBr6 with different Ce+3 activator concentrations were grown by a two-zone Bridgman method. This new compound belongs to a large elpasolite halide (A2BLnX6) family. Many of these elpasolite compounds have shown high luminosity, good energy resolution and excellent proportionality in comparison to traditional scintillators such as CsI and NaI; therefore, they are particularly attractive for gamma-ray spectroscopy applications. This study investigated the scintillator properties of Cs2NaGdBr6:Ce+3 crystals as a new material for radiation detection. Special focus has been placed on the effects of activator concentration (0 to 50 mol.%) on the photoluminescence responses. Results of structural refinement, photoluminescence, radioluminescence, lifetime and proportionality measurements for this new compound are reported.

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Elpasolite scintillators

Doty, Fred P.; Yang, Pin Y.; Zhou, Xiaowang Z.; Rodriguez, Marko A.

This work was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Nonproliferation Research to develop elpasolite materials, with an emphasis on high-atomic-number rare-earth elpasolites for gamma-ray spectrometer applications. Low-cost, high-performance gamma-ray spectrometers are needed for detection of nuclear proliferation. Cubic materials, such as some members of the elpasolite family (A2BLnX6; Ln-lanthanide and X-halogen), hold promise due to their high light output, proportionality, and potential for scale-up. Using both computational and experimental studies, a systematic investigation of the compositionstructureproperty relationships of these high-atomic-number elpasolite halides was performed. The results reduce the barrier to commercialization of large single crystals or transparent ceramics, and will facilitate economical scale-up of elpasolites for high-sensitivity gamma-ray spectroscopy.

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Accelerated molecular dynamics and equation-free methods for simulating diffusion in solids

Deng, Jie D.; Erickson, Lindsay C.; Plimpton, Steven J.; Thompson, Aidan P.; Zhou, Xiaowang Z.; Zimmerman, Jonathan A.

Many of the most important and hardest-to-solve problems related to the synthesis, performance, and aging of materials involve diffusion through the material or along surfaces and interfaces. These diffusion processes are driven by motions at the atomic scale, but traditional atomistic simulation methods such as molecular dynamics are limited to very short timescales on the order of the atomic vibration period (less than a picosecond), while macroscale diffusion takes place over timescales many orders of magnitude larger. We have completed an LDRD project with the goal of developing and implementing new simulation tools to overcome this timescale problem. In particular, we have focused on two main classes of methods: accelerated molecular dynamics methods that seek to extend the timescale attainable in atomistic simulations, and so-called 'equation-free' methods that combine a fine scale atomistic description of a system with a slower, coarse scale description in order to project the system forward over long times.

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Results 101–125 of 151
Results 101–125 of 151