Monte Carlo simulation of a very high resolution thermal neutron detector composed of glass scintillator microfibers
Song Yushou, Joseph Conner, Xiaodong Zhang, Jason P. Hayward

TL;DR
This paper proposes and simulates a high-resolution thermal neutron detector using microfibers, achieving micron-level spatial resolution and analyzing its efficiency and performance through detailed Monte Carlo simulations.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel microfiber-based neutron detector design and validates its expected high spatial resolution and efficiency through comprehensive Geant4 simulations.
Findings
Expected spatial resolution of ~1 micron
Detection efficiency of 3.7% for 0.1 mm thickness
Efficiency increases tenfold with 1 mm thickness
Abstract
In order to develop a high spatial resolution (micron level) thermal neutron detector, a detector assembly composed of cerium doped lithium glass microfibers, each with a diameter of 1\,m, is proposed, where the neutron absorption location is reconstructed from the observed charged particle products that result from neutron absorption. To suppress the cross talk of the scintillation light, each scintillating fiber is surrounded by air-filled glass capillaries with the same diameter as the fiber. This pattern is repeated to form a bulk microfiber detector. On one end, the surface of the detector is painted with a thin optical reflector to increase the light collection efficiency at the other end. Then the scintillation light emitted by any neutron interaction is transmitted to one end, magnified, and recorded by an intensified CCD camera. A simulation based on the Geant4 toolkit was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · Nuclear Physics and Applications · Particle Detector Development and Performance
