Author:
Pfeiffer D.,Brunbauer F.,Cristiglio V.,Hall-Wilton R.,Lupberger M.,Markó M.,Muller H.,Oksanen E.,Oliveri E.,Ropelewski L.,Rusu A.,Samarati J.,Scharenberg L.,van Stenis M.,Thuiner P.,Veenhof R.
Abstract
Abstract
The European Spallation Source (ESS) in Lund, Sweden will
become the world's most powerful thermal neutron source. The
Macromolecular Diffractometer (NMX) at the ESS requires three
51.2 × 51.2 cm2 detectors with reasonable detection
efficiency, sub-mm spatial resolution, a narrow point-spread
function (PSF), and good time resolution. This work presents
measurements with the improved version of the NMX detector prototype
consisting of a Triple-GEM (Gas Electron Multiplier) detector with a
natural Gd converter and a low material budget readout. The detector
was successfully tested at the neutron reactor of the Budapest
Neutron Centre (BNC) and the D16 instrument at the Institut
Laue-Langevin (ILL) in Grenoble. The measurements with Cadmium and
Gadolinium masks in Budapest demonstrate that the point-spread
function of the detector lacks long tails that could impede the
measurement of diffraction spot intensities. On the D16 instrument
at ILL, diffraction spots from Triose phosphate isomerase w/
2-phosphoglycolate (PGA) inhibitor were measured both in the MILAND
Helium-3 detector and the Gd-GEM. The comparison between the two
detectors shows a similar point-spread function in both detectors,
and the expected efficiency ratio compared to the Helium-3
detector. Both measurements together thus give good indications that
the Gd-GEM detector fits the requirements for the NMX instrument at
ESS.
Subject
Mathematical Physics,Instrumentation
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献