Measurement of Proton Quenching in a Plastic Scintillator Detector
Abstract
The non-linear energy response of the plastic scintillator EJ-260 is measured
with the MicroCHANDLER detector, using neutron beams of energy 5 to 27 MeV at
the Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory. The first and second order Birks'
constants are extracted from the data, and found to be $k_B = (8.70 \pm
0.93)\times 10^{-3}\ {\rm g/cm^2/MeV}$ and $k_C = (1.42 \pm 1.00) \times
10^{-5}\ {\rm (g/cm^2/MeV)^2}$. This result covers a unique energy range that
is of direct relevance for fast neutron backgrounds in reactor inverse beta
decay detectors. These measurements will improve the energy non-linearity
modeling of plastic scintillator detectors. In particular, the updated energy
response model will lead to an improvement of fast neutron modeling for
detectors based on the CHANDLER reactor neutrino detector technology.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23996Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1088/1748-0221/16/02/P02035Publication Info
Awe, Connor; Barbeau, Phillip; Haghighat, Alireza; Hedges, Sam; Johnson, Tyler; Li,
Shengchao; ... Walkup, Keegan (2020). Measurement of Proton Quenching in a Plastic Scintillator Detector. Journal of Instrumentation, 16(2). pp. P02035-P02035. 10.1088/1748-0221/16/02/P02035. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23996.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Phillip S. Barbeau
Associate Professor of Physics
Professor Barbeau’s research interests are predominantly in the fields of neutrino
and astroparticle physics. His efforts are focused on (but not limited to) three major
areas of research: studying the physics of coherent neutrino-nucleus scattering; novel
searches for the dark matter in our universe; and searches for zero neutrino double
beta decay. The unifying aspect of the work is the common need for new and creative
detector development in order to solve some of the “hard”

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