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ADVANCED ENERGY-RESOLVING IMAGING DETECTORS FOR APPLICATIONS AT PULSED NEUTRON SOURCES
Award Information
Agency: Department of Energy
Branch: N/A
Contract: DE-SC0009657
Agency Tracking Number: 222465
Amount:
$543,000.00
Phase:
Phase II
Program:
SBIR
Solicitation Topic Code:
09b
Solicitation Number:
DE-FOA-0001405
Timeline
Solicitation Year:
2016
Award Year:
2016
Award Start Date (Proposal Award Date):
2016-04-15
Award End Date (Contract End Date):
2017-04-14
Small Business Information
10 Picker Road, Sturbridge, MA, 01566-1251
DUNS:
825520562
HUBZone Owned:
N
Woman Owned:
N
Socially and Economically Disadvantaged:
N
Principal Investigator
Name: Bruce Feller
Title: Mr.
Phone: (508) 347-7679
Email: bfeller@novascientific.com
Title: Mr.
Phone: (508) 347-7679
Email: bfeller@novascientific.com
Business Contact
Name: Brian White
Title: Mr.
Phone: (508) 347-7679
Email: bwhite@novascientific.com
Title: Mr.
Phone: (508) 347-7679
Email: bwhite@novascientific.com
Research Institution
N/A
Abstract
NOVA Scientific, Inc. proposes a Phase IIB SBIR program to further develop, refine, and
commercialize a compact solid-state epithermal neutron imaging detector based on
microchannel plates (MCPs), having (1) high detection efficiency well into the epithermal
neutron energy range, and (2) the flexibility of having an externally-mounted pixelated electronic
readout mated directly onto a hermetically-sealed MCP neutron detector ‘tube’. As a result of
these developments, these devices will be able to perform energy-resolved neutron detection
and imaging at pulsed neutron sources, detecting individual neutrons with a spatial resolution of
25-50 μm and with ultrafast timing resolution of ~100 ns for epithermal neutrons.
The pulsed structure of the new and more powerful neutron beams coming online
enables measurement of neutron energies through the time-of-flight (TOF) method. The unique
capability of MCP detectors to measure the energy of each detected neutron provides a
capability to conduct experiments across a very broad neutron energy range simultaneously –
encompassing epithermal, thermal down to cold neutron energies. Simultaneous detection of
multiple Bragg edges, for example, can enable highly useful measurements in crystallographic
structure, strain, phase, texture, and compositional distribution. The proposed enhancements in
MCP epithermal neutron response resulting from this program, combined with a separate DOE
STTR Phase IIB for NOVA to commercialize larger area (>100 cm2) vacuum-sealed and tileable
square format cold and thermal neutron-sensitive MCP imaging detectors, could complement or
potentially even replace the large array detectors currently implemented at large neutron
scattering facilities.
Work at Argonne National Laboratory’s Atomic Layer Deposition (ALD) group, guided by
NOVA, has continued its excellent progress in the Phase II program, enhancing the sensitivity
of NOVA”s MCP cold and thermal neutron detectors well into the epithermal neutron energy
range. Using atomic layer deposition (ALD), we continue to refine the application of submicron
oxide films of Hafnium, Tantalum, and Samarium along the inner microchannel walls of the
detector. In Phase IIB, we will conduct additional neutron testing and full characterization of
ongoing improvements to the MCP detectors, working with the neutron facilities (SNS/HFIR)
and staff of the Detector Group at Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
Moreover, our recent marketing studies suggest that successful commercialization of
epithermal neutron-sensitive MCP detectors will require that we provide a ‘user-friendly, turnkey’detector system. Our newly developed epithermal MCPs will be sealed into an image tube,
which will have the unique feature of having an externally mounted imaging readout capable of
ultrafast event time-tagging – thus dispensing with cumbersome and unwieldy vacuum
equipment for active pumping of the detector and readout.
Finally, we include in the Phase IIB a new task not previously proposed in Phase II,
enabled by the energy range enhancement of NOVA’s MCP-based neutron imaging detectors.
We will assess the integration into a ‘benchtop’ system, of NOVA’s epithermal imaging detector
with highly intense compact and portable neutron generators, which have recently advanced in
capability. If successfully developed and refined, this integration could finally make available
true portable neutron imaging and radiography for non-destructive evaluation (NDE). * Information listed above is at the time of submission. *