Gas Detectors & Interactions - Ionization & Sparks
- Principle: Radiation ionizes gas atoms, creating electron-ion pairs. An applied electric field collects these charges, generating a measurable signal.
- Key Interactions:
- Charged particles (α, β): Direct ionization along their tracks.
- Photons (γ, X-rays): Indirect ionization via photoelectric effect, Compton scattering, or pair production, which release energetic electrons that then cause ionization.
- Detector Regions (Voltage Dependent Signal Amplification):
- Ionization Chamber:
- Low voltage; collects only primary ions created by radiation.
- Current output is proportional to radiation intensity/exposure rate.
- Use: Dose calibrators, some survey meters.
- Proportional Counter:
- Medium voltage; primary electrons gain energy to cause secondary ionization (gas amplification).
- Output pulse height is proportional to the initial energy deposited.
- Use: Spectroscopy, distinguishing α from β particles.
- Geiger-Müller (GM) Counter:
- High voltage; a single ionizing event triggers a Townsend avalanche (spark/full gas discharge).
- Produces large, uniform, energy-independent pulses ("all-or-none" response).
- Significant "dead time" after each pulse.
- Use: Contamination survey meters (high sensitivity to detect presence of radiation).

- Ionization Chamber:
ā GM counters exhibit a characteristic "dead time" (typically 50-300 µs) after detecting an event, during which they are insensitive to further radiation. This limits their accuracy at high count rates. š Mnemonic for GM counter gas: "Noble Argon quenched with Halogen" (e.g., Argon + Bromine/Chlorine).
Scintillators & PMTs - Crystal Glow & Boost
- Scintillators: Convert incident gamma ray energy into light photons.
- Mechanism: Ionizing radiation excites crystal; de-excitation emits light.
- Primary material: NaI(Tl) (Thallium-activated Sodium Iodide).
- High density & $Z_{\text{eff}}$ for efficient gamma absorption.
- Light yield proportional to deposited energy.
- Peak emission: 415 nm (blue light).
- Photomultiplier Tube (PMT): Detects & amplifies weak light from scintillator.
- Sequence:
- Photocathode: Converts light to photoelectrons.
- Dynodes (typically 10-12): Electrons strike dynodes; secondary emission multiplies electrons (gain 3-6x per stage).
- Anode: Collects amplified electron pulse (total gain $10^6 - 10^8$).
- Sequence:
ā For $^{137}\text{Cs}$ (662 keV), NaI(Tl) detectors typically have an energy resolution of 6-8%.
scintillator crystal coupled to a photomultiplier tube PMT assembly showing gamma ray interaction, light emission, and electron multiplication process in PMT)
Gamma Camera & SPECT - Photon Mapping Magic
- Gamma Camera (Anger Camera): Detects γ-rays from radiopharmaceuticals.
- š Can Someone Please Pass Pepper? (Collimator, Scintillator (NaI(Tl)), PMT, Positioning, PHA).
- Collimator: Lead septa; types: parallel-hole (most common), pinhole, converging, diverging. Filters γ-ray direction.
- Scintillation Crystal (NaI(Tl)): Converts γ-photons to light photons.
- PMTs: Convert light to electrical signal; amplify.
- Positioning Circuitry: Determines X,Y location of scintillation.
- PHA: Selects photons in energy window; rejects scatter.
- SPECT (Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography):
- Tomographic imaging using rotating gamma camera(s) around patient.
- Acquires multiple 2D projections from various angles.
- Reconstruction (FBP or Iterative like OSEM) creates 3D images.
- Applications: Myocardial perfusion, bone scans, brain SPECT.
ā Energy resolution of NaI(Tl) for $^{99m}$Tc (140 keV) is 7-10%, vital for scatter rejection.

HighāYield Points - ā” Biggest Takeaways
- Gas-filled detectors (Ionization, Proportional, GM counters) rely on gas ionization by radiation.
- Scintillation detectors, primarily NaI(Tl), are crucial for gamma cameras (SPECT).
- Gamma cameras employ a collimator, NaI(Tl) crystal, PMTs, and PHA.
- PET scanners use annihilation coincidence detection (ACD) of 511 keV photons.
- Semiconductor detectors (e.g., CZT, Ge) offer superior energy resolution.
- Dead time limits detector accuracy at high count rates.
- Energy resolution distinguishes energies, crucial for scatter rejection.
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