Dosimetry and Calorimetry Performance of a Scientific CMOS Camera for Environmental Monitoring

Author:

Aguilar-Arevalo AlexisORCID,Bertou XavierORCID,Canet CarlesORCID,Cruz-Pérez Miguel AngelORCID,Deisting AlexanderORCID,Dias AdrianaORCID,D’Olivo Juan Carlos,Favela-Pérez Francisco,Garcés Estela A.ORCID,González Muñoz Adiv,Guerra-Pulido Jaime OctavioORCID,Mancera-Alejandrez Javier,Marín-Lámbarri Daniel JoséORCID,Martinez Montero Mauricio,Monroe JocelynORCID,Paling Sean,Peeters Simon J. M.ORCID,Scovell Paul,Türkoğlu CenkORCID,Vázquez-Jáuregui EricORCID,Walding JosephORCID

Abstract

This paper explores the prospect of CMOS devices to assay lead in drinking water, using calorimetry. Lead occurs together with traces of radioisotopes, e.g., 210Pb, producing γ-emissions with energies ranging from 10 keV to several 100 keV when they decay; this range is detectable in silicon sensors. In this paper we test a CMOS camera (Oxford Instruments Neo 5.5) for its general performance as a detector of X-rays and low energy γ-rays and assess its sensitivity relative to the World Health Organization upper limit on lead in drinking water. Energies from 6 keV to 60 keV are examined. The CMOS camera has a linear energy response over this range and its energy resolution is for the most part slightly better than 2%. The Neo sCMOS is not sensitive to X-rays with energies below ∼10 keV. The smallest detectable rate is 40±3mHz, corresponding to an incident activity on the chip of 7±4Bq. The estimation of the incident activity sensitivity from the detected activity relies on geometric acceptance and the measured efficiency vs. energy. We report the efficiency measurement, which is 0.08(2)% (0.0011(2)%) at 26.3keV (59.5keV). Taking calorimetric information into account we measure a minimal detectable rate of 4±1mHz (1.5±1mHz) for 26.3keV (59.5keV) γ-rays, which corresponds to an incident activity of 1.0±6Bq (57±33Bq). Toy Monte Carlo and Geant4 simulations agree with these results. These results show this CMOS sensor is well-suited as a γ- and X-ray detector with sensitivity at the few to 100 ppb level for 210Pb in a sample.

Funder

Global Challenges Research Fund

CONACyT

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

Reference33 articles.

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