Paper
30 April 2009 The SORDS trimodal imager detector arrays
Daniel Wakeford, H. R. Andrews, E. T. H. Clifford, Liqian Li, Nick Bray, Darren Locklin, Michael V. Hynes, Maurice Toolin, Bernard Harris, John McElroy, Mark Wallace, Richard Lanza
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Raytheon Trimodal Imager (TMI) uses coded aperture and Compton imaging technologies as well as the nonimaging shadow technology to locate an SNM or radiological threat in the presence of background. The heart of the TMI is two arrays of NaI crystals. The front array serves as both a coded aperture and the first scatterer for Compton imaging. It is made of 35 5x5x2" crystals with specially designed low profile PMTs. The back array is made of 30 2.5x3x24" position-sensitive crystals which are read out at both ends. These crystals are specially treated to provide the required position resolution at the best possible energy resolution. Both arrays of detectors are supported by aluminum superstructures. These have been efficiently designed to allow a wide field of view and to provide adequate support to the crystals to permit use of the TMI as a vehicle-mounted, field-deployable system. Each PMT has a locally mounted high-voltage supply that is remotely controlled. Each detector is connected to a dedicated FPGA which performs automated gain alignment and energy calibration, event timing and diagnostic health checking. Data are streamed, eventby- event, from each of the 65 detector FPGAs to one master FPGA. The master FPGA acts both as a synchronization clock, and as an event sorting unit. Event sorting involves stamping events as singles or as coincidences, based on the approximately instantaneous detector hit pattern. Coincidence determination by the master FPGA provides a pre-sorting for the events that will ultimately be used in the Compton imaging and coded aperture imaging algorithms. All data acquisition electronics have been custom designed for the TMI.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Daniel Wakeford, H. R. Andrews, E. T. H. Clifford, Liqian Li, Nick Bray, Darren Locklin, Michael V. Hynes, Maurice Toolin, Bernard Harris, John McElroy, Mark Wallace, and Richard Lanza "The SORDS trimodal imager detector arrays", Proc. SPIE 7310, Non-Intrusive Inspection Technologies II, 73100D (30 April 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.818770
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Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Simulation of CCA and DLA aggregates

Crystals

Detector arrays

Field programmable gate arrays

Electronics

Calibration

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