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1.
Radiat Prot Dosimetry ; 188(2): 232-237, 2020 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31922576

ABSTRACT

The effect of previous irradiation on the sensitivity of the glow peaks of LiF:Mg,Ti (TLD-100) is investigated up to levels of dose of 400 Gy in both slow-cooled and naturally cooled materials following the 400°C/1 hour pre-irradiation anneal. It is demonstrated that the naturally cooled samples can be re-used up to accumulated levels of dose of 50 Gy without recalibration. At 400 Gy a significant decrease in sensitivity of approximately 25% is observed for all the glow peaks (excluding peak 3). In slow-cooled materials even 100 Gy does not alter the sensitivity of the material.


Subject(s)
Thermoluminescent Dosimetry , Titanium , Equipment Design , Fluorides , Lithium Compounds , Radiation Dosage
2.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 79(7): 073908, 2008 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18681717

ABSTRACT

Temperature measurements in a laser heated diamond anvil cell (DAC) are currently limited to temperatures above 1000 K using optics and detectors in the visible range. We have built a pyrometer in the IR range and expanded the lower limit of temperature detection to 400 K. The pyrometer is designed for very low thermal radiation intensities, measured sequentially through a set of bandpass filters in the range of 1.2-3.4 microm using very efficient IR photodetectors. The thermal radiation from the center of the cw Nd:YAG laser heated spot is least square fitted to a Planck curve, using a gray body approximation. Melting is detected by changes in the light scattering picture of an auxiliary He-Ne laser from the surface of the hot spot, and by a change in slope in the plot of hot spot temperature versus laser power. In this work we demonstrate measurement of the melting curve of zinc up to 25 GPa. The melting curve is in very good agreement with previous results which were taken up to 6 GPa in a large volume press.

3.
Appl Opt ; 37(21): 4914-20, 1998 Jul 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18285957

ABSTRACT

We measured the basic optical properties of Pyrromethene-567 (P567) and Pyrromethene-556 (P556) dye solutions that are relevant to their application as dye lasers. The fluorescence spectra of methanol solutions show mirror images in relation to the absorption spectra, with Stokes shifts of 29.5 and 37.5 nm, respectively, for the two dyes. The central fluorescence peaks were at 546 and 535 nm, with widths of ~40 and ~50 nm (FWHM). The quantum yields were 97% ? 5% and 78% ? 5% for P567 and P556, respectively. Fluorescence lifetimes of 6.0 ? 0.2 ns were obtained for both dyes in methanol. Laser action, obtained by pumping with the green emission line (510.6 nm) from a copper-vapor laser, was measured in a Hänsch-type cavity. Tunability ranged from 531 to 590 nm for P567 and from 522 to 590 nm for P556. Lasing thresholds were ~0.27 and ~0.16 mJ/pulse, with 25% and 27% slope efficiencies for P567 and P556, respectively. Spectroscopy and lasing were studied in other solvents as well.

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