Affiliation:
1. University of West Florida, Electrical and Computer Engineering, Pensacola, FL;
2. Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, FL
Abstract
Alpha-particle sources are widely used in industrial and medical applications. Such applications include smoke detectors, static charge eliminators, and radiation therapy. This paper is concerned with the detection of alpha particles. A number of techniques are known for the detection of alpha particles. Those techniques include the Geiger–Müller tube, the ZnS scintillator, the air-filled ionization chamber, and the spark chamber. All the techniques that are currently known are based on the interaction of the ionizing radiation with matter. Charged particles, such as alpha particles, upon entering a medium (such as air), encounter many collisions with bound electrons and lose kinetic energy in the process. The atoms of the medium also become ionized, and a large number of free electrons are released inside the medium. The theory describing the interaction of ionizing radiation with matter is well known and includes formulas such as the Bethe-Bloch formula for the stopping power of matter and formulas for calculating the range of the ionizing radiation in matter. Essentially, all the known techniques for the detection of alpha particles are based on detecting the presence of free electrons inside the medium. This paper presents a new technique for the detection of alpha particles that does not depend on the theory of the interaction of alpha particles with matter. Instead, the technique is based on the direct detection of the positive charge that is carried by the alpha particles. Furthermore, it is the objective of this paper to demonstrate that the direct detection of the charge carried by alpha particles can be done with a tiny and inexpensive component: a metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET).
Publisher
American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT)
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,Education
Cited by
1 articles.
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