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Poly- Versus Mono-Energetic Dual-Spectrum Non-Intrusive Inspection of Cargo Containers
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Citations
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References
2017
Year
EngineeringX-ray SpectroscopyAbsorption SpectroscopyPolycapillary OpticsX-ray ImagingCargo ContainersX-ray TechnologyNuclear MaterialsInstrumentationRadiation ImagingHealth SciencesMaterials ScienceRadiation DetectionPhysicsNondestructive TestingNuclear SecurityImage CargoDual-energy X-ray NiiSpectroscopyMaterials CharacterizationApplied PhysicsX-ray DiffractionX-ray Optic
In this paper, based on an invited talk at SORMA (May 2016), we present an overview of x-ray sources, detectors and system configurations for non-intrusive inspection (NII) of cargo containers. Our emphasis is on dual-energy x-ray NII for detecting high-atomic-number (Z ≥ 72) materials such as tungsten shielding and special nuclear materials (SNM). Standard single-energy (MeV and above) x-rays needed to penetrate and image cargo provide little SNM contrast, whereas dual-energy x-ray NII is demonstrated as a way to improve the selectivity of materials with Z<;72 vs. those with Z ≥ 72. For two possible dual-energy x-ray source technologies - polyenergetic dual-energy (PDE) and quasi-monoenergetic x-ray sources (QMXS) - we investigate their trade-offs and future prospects using experimental and simulated results. The reduced scatter and larger separation of low- and high-energy photons provided by QMXS offers improved high-Z material contrast, but practical considerations such as flux and pulse rate need to be solved before making a deployable system. Straight-ray simulations show factor of four increases in contrast for QMXS over PDE scans of tin (Z=50) and iron (Z=26) relative to a uranium plate (Z=92) behind 20 cm of iron simulated cargo.
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