Gieger Mullar Counters

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Gieger-muller

counters
PRESENTED BY:
ABDUL REHMAN
BSc.(RADIOTHERAPY) 2nd year
PRESENTED to:
Mam Bisma Atique
DISCOVERY
• The original detection principle was discovered in 1908 at Cavendish
laboratory, but it was not until the development of the Geiger-Muller tube in
1928 that the Gieger-Muller counter became a practical instrument.
Table of contents
• Introduction
• Parts
• Principle of operation
• Dead time
• Quenching
• Advantages
• Disadvantages
Introduction
It is a well known radiation detector.
A Geiger counter (Geiger-Muller tube) is a device used for the detection and
measurement of all types of radiation:
• alpha
• beta
• gamma
Parts
Basically it consists of :
• Stiff central wire acting as a node.
• A pair of electrodes surrounded by a gas.
• The electrodes have a high voltage across them.
• The gas used is usually Helium or Argon.
• A scalar counts the current pulses, and one obtains a ”count” whenever
radiation ionizes the gas.
Simple Geiger Counter
.
WORKING
o When radiation enter the tube, ionization is produced.
o The free electrons are attracted towards the positively charged charged central wire.
o As they are accelerated towards the wire by a strong electric field, they collide with
other molecules of gas and nock out more electrons which in turn do the same and
produce a cascade of electrons that moves towards the central wire.(avalanche
process)
o This makes a short pulse of electric current to pass through an external resistor
o It is amplified & registered electronically.
Cont.…
• The cascade of electrons produced by the entry of an ionizing radiation is counted
as a single pulse of approximately of the same size whatever the energy or the path
of the particle may be.
• Thus, it cannot discriminate between the energies of the incident particle as output
pulses are same.
• The entire electron pulse takes less than 1 micro s.
• However positive ions being very massive than the electrons, take a several hundred
times as long to reach the outer cathode. During this time called “dead time”
10−4 sec of the counter further incoming particle cannot be counted.
DEAD TIME
• “Time in which someone or something is inactive or unable to act
productivity.”
• OR
• “The period after the recording of particle or pulse when a detector is unable
to record another.”
• FOR GM COUNTER IT IS 10−4 sec
Spurious Counts
• When positive ions strike the cathode, secondary electron are emitted from
the surface .
• These electrons would be accelerated to give further spurious counts. This is
prevented by mixing a small amount of quenching gas with the principal
gas.
Quenching Gas
• The Quenching Gas must have ionization potential lower than that of inert or
principal gas. Thus, the ions of quenching gas reach the cathode before principal
gas ions.
• When they reach near the cathode, they capture electrons and becomes a neutral
molecules. Following neutralization, the excess energy of quenching molecules is
dissipated in dissociation of molecule rather than in the release of electrons from
cathode. e.g. bromine gas is added to neon gas.
• The bromine molecules absorb energy from the ions or secondary electrons and
dissociate into bromine atoms. The atoms then readily recombine into molecule
again for the next pulse. The gas quenching is called “self quenching”
INDUCED QUENXHING
• Although all commercial Geiger tubes are self quenched, it is common
practice to use electronic quenching in addition. For this purpose, a large
negative voltage is applied to the anode immediately after recording the
output pulse.
• This reduce the electric field below the critical value for ionization by
collision. The negative voltage remains until all positive ions are collected at
cathode thus preventing secondary pulses.
Plateau and over voltage
• In order to decide the operating voltage of the
GM tube a graph (X axis) and count rate (Y axis) is plotted.
• The counting rate rises and reach the Geiger region
when pulses due to all ionizing particles become of the
same size and are recorded. This is called Geiger threshold.
• When the voltage is increased beyond threshold
the counting rate remains the same for large variation.
This straight portion of the curve is called plateau.
• This plateau continues, till the excess potential
over the threshold, called the over voltage becomes so high
that the counter breaks down into a continuous discharge.
ADVANTAGES
• It measures both primary as well as secondary radiations.
• It can be used to determine the range or penetration power of ionizing
particles by inserting the metal plates of varying thickness between the
source and the tube helps to estimate the penetration power of incident
radiation.
Disadvantages
• It is not measure the energy of the ionizing radiation.
• It is not suitable for fast counting because of relatively long dead time of the
order of more than a millisecond which limits the counting rate to a few
hundred counts per second.
THANK YOU

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