Frontiers in Physics (Mar 2020)

Thallium Bromide Gamma-Ray Spectrometers and Pixel Arrays

  • Hadong Kim,
  • Yaroslav Ogorodnik,
  • Alireza Kargar,
  • Leonard Cirignano,
  • Crystal Lynn Thrall,
  • William Koehler,
  • Sean Patrick O'Neal,
  • Zhong He,
  • Erik Swanberg,
  • Stephen A. Payne,
  • Michael R. Squillante,
  • Kanai Shah

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2020.00055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Thallium bromide (TlBr) is a compound semiconductor with a band gap of 2.68 eV making it ideal for room temperature radiation detection. The high atomic numbers, 81 and 35, and the high density of 7.56 g/cm3 give it excellent gamma-ray stopping power. TlBr is a cubic material that melts congruently at a relatively low temperature (~480°C). These properties make it relatively easy to grow good quality crystals with high yield. As a result of improvements in the purification of TlBr mobility-lifetime product of electrons, μτe, is now on the order of 10−2 cm2/V, which is similar to that of CZT. High μτe enables the fabrication of thicker detectors with good charge collection and energy resolution. The properties of TlBr make it ideal for use in room temperature gamma radiation operation [1]. Single carrier devices such as small pixel arrays [2] and Frisch collar devices [3] which were developed for CZT can also been applied to TlBr. For example, better than 1% FWHM at 662 keV has been obtained for single pixel events with small (e.g., 3 × 3 pixels, 1-mm pitch, 5-mm thick) arrays.

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