Absolute light yield of the EJ-204 plastic scintillator

Plastic scintillator Aging Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors 610 Molecular FOS: Physical sciences Organic scintillator Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) Nuclear and Plasma Physics 7. Clean energy 530 Atomic Nuclear & Particles Physics Synchrotrons and Accelerators Nuclear and plasma physics Other Physical Sciences Particle and Plasma Physics Physical Sciences Scintillator characterization Nuclear Absolute light yield Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) NSD-Nuclear Data Nuclear Experiment Astronomical and Space Sciences
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2023.168397 Publication Date: 2023-06-01T07:45:38Z
ABSTRACT
12 pages, 9 figures<br/>The absolute light yield of a scintillator, defined as the number of scintillation photons produced per unit energy deposited, is a useful quantity for scintillator development, research, and applications. Yet, literature data on the absolute light yield of organic scintillators are limited. The goal of this work is to assess the suitability of the EJ-204 plastic scintillator from Eljen Technology to serve as a reference standard for measurements of the absolute light yield of organic scintillators. Four EJ-204 samples were examined: two manufactured approximately four months prior and stored in high-purity nitrogen, and two aged approximately eleven years and stored in ambient air. The scintillator response was measured using a large-area avalanche photodiode calibrated using low energy $γ$-ray and X-ray sources. The product of the quantum efficiency of the photodetector and light collection efficiency of the housing was characterized using an experimentally-benchmarked optical photon simulation. The average absolute light yield of the fresh samples, 9100 $\pm$ 400 photons per MeV, is lower than the manufacturer-reported value of 10400 photons per MeV. Moreover, the aged samples demonstrated significantly lower light yields, deviating from the manufacturer specification by as much as 26\%. These results are consistent with recent work showcasing environmental aging in plastic scintillators and suggest that experimenters should use caution when deploying plastic scintillators in photon counting applications.<br/>
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