Neutron Response of the EJ-254 Boron-Loaded Plastic Scintillator
Gino Gabella (1), Bethany L. Goldblum (1, 2), Thibault A. Laplace, (1), Juan J. Manfredi (1), Joseph Gordon (1), Zachary W. Sweger (1), Edith, Bourret (2) ((1) University of California, Berkeley, (2) Lawrence Berkeley, National Laboratory)

TL;DR
This study characterizes the neutron response of EJ-254 boron-loaded plastic scintillator, measuring its light yield for fast and slow neutrons, and analyzing its ability to discriminate neutron signals from gamma rays.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of EJ-254's proton light yield and neutron capture response, enhancing understanding of its performance for neutron detection.
Findings
Proton light yield of EJ-254 agrees with similar plastic scintillators.
Neutron capture light yield is approximately 89.4 keVee.
Clear separation between gamma-ray and fast neutron signals was not achieved.
Abstract
Organic scintillators doped with capture agents provide a detectable signal for neutrons over a broad energy range. This work characterizes the fast and slow neutron response of EJ-254, an organic plastic scintillator with 5% natural boron loading by weight. For fast neutrons, the primary mechanism for light generation in organic scintillators is n-p elastic scattering. To study the fast neutron response, the proton light yield of EJ-254 was measured at the 88-Inch Cyclotron at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Using a broad-spectrum neutron source and a double time-of-flight technique, the EJ-254 proton light yield was obtained over the energy range of approximately 270 keV to 4.5 MeV and determined to be in agreement with other plastic scintillators comprised of the same polymer base. To isolate the slow neutron response, an AmBe source with polyethylene moderator was made…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
