We report a study of composite scintillating ceramics based on coupled layers of two different garnets, namely Ce-doped gadolinium gallium aluminium (GGAG:Ce) and Pr-doped yttrium aluminium (YAG:Pr), fabricated by hot isostatic pressing. Two samples were prepared, with different GGAG:Ce layer thickness, 120 µm and 690 µm respectively, but with a comparable overall thickness of 1.4 mm. The key finding is that the material architecture strongly determines the scintillation response. The radioluminescence is that expected from the irradiated material when a thick layer of ceramic is exposed to X-rays. Conversely, exposing a thin layer allows a non-null probability —about 0.3% for 120 µm of GGAG— of finding an X-ray photon in the underlying layer, and thus radioluminescence from both materials is recorded. We believe these results can extend the potential of layered optical ceramics for advanced devices, such as energy- and direction-sensitive X-ray detectors.
Cova, F., Hostaša, J., Piancastelli, A., Esposito, L., Paleari, A., Vedda, A., et al. (2023). Layered Y3Al5O12:Pr/Gd3(Ga,Al)5O12:Ce optical ceramics: Synthesis and photo-physical properties. JOURNAL OF THE EUROPEAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, 43(15 (December 2023)), 7068-7075 [10.1016/j.jeurceramsoc.2023.07.037].
Layered Y3Al5O12:Pr/Gd3(Ga,Al)5O12:Ce optical ceramics: Synthesis and photo-physical properties
Cova, FrancescaPrimo
;Paleari, Alberto;Vedda, AnnaPenultimo
;Lorenzi, Roberto
Ultimo
2023
Abstract
We report a study of composite scintillating ceramics based on coupled layers of two different garnets, namely Ce-doped gadolinium gallium aluminium (GGAG:Ce) and Pr-doped yttrium aluminium (YAG:Pr), fabricated by hot isostatic pressing. Two samples were prepared, with different GGAG:Ce layer thickness, 120 µm and 690 µm respectively, but with a comparable overall thickness of 1.4 mm. The key finding is that the material architecture strongly determines the scintillation response. The radioluminescence is that expected from the irradiated material when a thick layer of ceramic is exposed to X-rays. Conversely, exposing a thin layer allows a non-null probability —about 0.3% for 120 µm of GGAG— of finding an X-ray photon in the underlying layer, and thus radioluminescence from both materials is recorded. We believe these results can extend the potential of layered optical ceramics for advanced devices, such as energy- and direction-sensitive X-ray detectors.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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