Photon detector response function methodology using MCNP and shift hybrid radiation transport code for wide-area contamination assay applications

E. Asano, D. Coleman, G. Davidson, S. Dewji

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Radiation transport modeling using the Monte Carlo N-Particle (MCNP) radiation transport code and Monte Carlo code, Shift, were employed to model detector responses for a variety of wide-area photon contamination scenarios. In this study, 2′′ × 2′′ and 3′′ × 3′′ cylindrical NaI(Tl) scintillation detector configurations at source detector-distances of 0.5 cm, 1 cm, 2.54 cm, 10 cm, and 30 cm were modeled. Media of soil, concrete, and steel were evaluated for contamination depths ranging from surface to a depth of an infinite thickness in each medium for photon energies ranging from 20 keV to 3 MeV, which correspond to the energies that current detectors can discern. Monoenergetic photon surface contamination detector responses for each of the media, source–detector distances, and detectors were estimated using MCNP v6.2. Shift was harnessed for improved variance reduction of particle transport in highly attenuating media to obtain average cell fluxes in the two MCNP NaI(Tl) scintillation detector configurations. Average cell flux values in Shift were coupled with detector responses from MCNP to convert average cell flux in a void to energy distribution of pulses in the NaI(Tl) scintillation detector crystal of interest. An optimized detector response function methodology was developed by coupling the MCNP radiation transport method with the Consistent Adjoint Driven Importance Sampling (CADIS) hybrid radiation transport method built into Shift to significantly decrease the runtime of thousands of MCNP pulse height simulations. The methodology may be utilized to quickly and accurately facilitate the assessment of a broad range of wide-area environmental contamination assay and decommissioning cleanup applications.

Funding

The authors would like to thank Dr. Douglas Peplow and Dr. Cihangir Celik of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, as well as Alex Perry of Texas A&M University for their provided technical expertise throughout the project effort.

Keywords

  • Decommissioning
  • Deterministic solver
  • Environmental assay
  • Gamma-ray spectroscopy
  • Monte Carlo
  • Radiation transport

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