Abstract
Abstract
Boron-lined gaseous neutron detectors intrinsically suffer
from the “self-absorption” effect and hence their neutron
detection efficiencies might be nonconstant, when the threshold of
them undergoes unexpected variation. To address this problem, we
propose a maximum likelihood estimation-based threshold determining
method, via which the pulse height spectra acquired under different
high voltages could be rescaled to the same abscissa axis of
deposited energies. Monte Carlo simulations were conducted to study
the relationship between the precision of the threshold
determination and the counting statistics, as well as the energy
deposition spectrum, indicating that the grazing angle incidence
neutron detector can achieve a fairly small relative standard
variation for a spectrum with a modest total neutron counts. A
prototype grazing angle incidence neutron detector has been
constructed and tested under high voltages ranging from 500 V to
950 V. The experimental results show that, with the maximum
likelihood estimation-based method, the threshold's relative
standard deviations are less than 10% even with a total neutron
counts as low as 100. As a result, the maximum relative variance of
the counting plateau curve is 4.8% in the region of
[500 V, 900 V] when the detector operates at a
grazing angle of 1.8°. The results presented in this study
indicate that combining the grazing angle incidence and the maximum
likelihood estimation-based threshold determining method would be a
promising way to achieve stable neutron detection efficiency for
neutron detectors with the boron layer as the neutron convertor.
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