Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Radiation detectors spark chambers

These have been used for detecting gamma rays with high positional resolution in 2D-ACAR experiments (see 7.2) [20], although—principally for reasons of availability, lower complexity and more straightforward maintenance—scintillation detectors are more common. Very briefly, a spark chamber is modified to detect gamma radiation with positional... [Pg.44]

To detect substances by physical methods which are nearly nondestructive means to employ their absorption or their emission of electromagnetic radiation. Suitable detectors may be the eye (visual detection) or photomultipliers, which are sensitive sensors for qualitative analysis and quantification (photometric measurement). The detection of radioactively labeled substances by autoradiography, fluorography, spark chamber, or scanning techniques is discussed in a special chapter of this Handbook (see Chapter 12, Thin-Layer Radiochromatography). [Pg.206]

The first radiation detectors were called radioscanners, and these were developed and introduced in the early 1960s (57). This was a major step forward in the automatic detection and subsequent quantitation of radioactive components on TLC plates. The sensitivity and resolution of the instruments were not very high, but peaks could be detected and their relative amounts subsequently quantitated. At around the same time spark chambers were also developed for use with TLC plates. However, these detectors could locate individual components on TLC plates but quantitation was not possible. [Pg.349]


See other pages where Radiation detectors spark chambers is mentioned: [Pg.1436]    [Pg.1436]    [Pg.294]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.349 ]




SEARCH



Radiation detectors

Spark

Sparking

Sparking chamber

© 2024 chempedia.info