Free ion yield of Trimethyl Bismuth used as sensitive medium for high-energy photon detection
M. Farrad\`eche, G. Tauzin, J-Ph. Mols, J-P. Dognon, V. Dauvois, V., Sharyy, J-P. Bard, X. Mancardi, P. Verrecchia, and D. Yvon

TL;DR
This study measures the free ion yield of trimethylbismuth, a promising medium for high-energy photon detection in PET imaging, revealing a significantly lower yield than similar liquids, which impacts detector performance.
Contribution
The paper introduces a precise measurement of trimethylbismuth's free ion yield and discusses its implications for high-energy photon detection and PET imaging.
Findings
Trimethylbismuth has a zero-field free ion yield of 0.083 +/- 0.003.
The measured free ion yield is seven times lower than similar dielectric liquids.
Quantum chemistry suggests high electron capture capacity of trimethylbismuth.
Abstract
The CaLIPSO project is an innovative high-energy photon detector concept using trimethylbismuth as sensitive medium in a liquid ionization chamber. The detector, designed for high precision brain PET imaging, works as a time-projection chamber and detects Cherenkov light and charge signal. We measured the free ion yield of trimethylbismuth, which represents the number of electron-ion pairs released by the incident photon. To do so, we developed a low-noise measuring system to determine the current induced by a 60Co source in the liquid with an accuracy better than 5 fA for an electric field up to 7 kV/cm. We used tetramethylsilane as benchmark liquid to validate the apparatus and we measured a zero-field free ion yield of 0.53 +/- 0.03 in agreement with measurements in literature. However, we found a zero-field free ion yield of 0.083 +/- 0.003 for trimethylbismuth, which is a factor 7…
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