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{{Adams
{{Adams
| number = ML13350A205
| number = ML003740012
| issue date = 06/30/1973
| issue date = 12/31/1983
| title = Specifications for Ge(Li) Spectroscopy Systems for Materials Protection Measurements
| title = (Task SG 042-2), Revision 2, Guidelines for Germanium Spectroscopy Systems for Measurement of Special Nuclear Material
| author name =  
| author name =  
| author affiliation = US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
| author affiliation = NRC/RES
| addressee name =  
| addressee name =  
| addressee affiliation =  
| addressee affiliation =  
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| license number =  
| license number =  
| contact person =  
| contact person =  
| document report number = RG-5.009
| document report number = RG-5.9 Rev 2
| document type = Regulatory Guide
| document type = Regulatory Guide
| page count = 10
| page count = 8
| revision = 0
}}
}}
{{#Wiki_filter:0U.S.!-ATOMIC ENERGY: COMMISSIONREGULATORYDIRECTORATE OF REGULATORY STANDARDSJune 1973GtUUIDEREGULATORY GUIDE 5.9SPECIFICATIONS FOR Ge(Li) SPECTROSCOPY SYSTEMSFOR MATERIAL PROTECTION MEASUREMENTSPART I: DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEMSA. INTRODUCTIONProposed revisions to section 70.51 ofl 0 CFR Part70. "Material Balwncc. Inventory and RecordsRequirenricnts." woold require licensees authorized topossess at any one time more than one effectivekilogram n.it" special nuclear material to establish andmaintain a system of control and accountability suchthat. the limit of error of any material unaccounted for(UL1F): ascertained asa result of a measured mnaterialhalance, meets established minimum .standards. Theselection and proper application of an. adequatemeasurement method for each of the material forms inthe fulccycle is essential for the maintenance of thesestandards.This is lhe. first in a two-part series of guides whichpresent specifications for Iithium-drifted germanium.Ge(Li); gamma ray spectroscopy systems. This guidanceapplies to the .selection of.a special nuclear material(SNM) assay system which utilizes gamma rayspectroscopy for the quantitative delermination of the.* SNM content and a qualitative detertuination of tileradionuclide abundances. Within each of the, guides inthis series, Data Acquisition and Data Reduction.I variations of a basic spectroscopy system are defired andindividual specifications provided. The procedures forapplying these systems to specific materials and theanalysis of the reduced data is tile subject of a later.guide.B. DISCUSSIONI. BackgroundGamma Iray spectroscopy systems have been usedfor the nondestructive assay (NDA) of various specialnuclear material forlims encounteled in the fulel cyclehoth for quantitative determintiont of the specialnuclear material cuntent, and for the determination ofradionuclide abundances. In addition to the NDA ofhulk materials, ganim:i ray spectroscopy is used in theanalysis of specially prepared. homogeneous lahor:,lorysamples.There is no single gainnna-ray spectroscupy systemavailable which is satisfactory to r all a pplic ition s nor isthere I standard which defines and specilies the typv ortypes of Isstenls it) be used in cach of tihe aboveapplications. T"his guide defines and details thlespecifications for ganmma ray spectroscopy daltaaquisition systems appropriate for special nuclearmnalcrial assay.The scope of this guide is limited to thtconsideration of Ge(Li) gamma ray spectroscopvsystems; No discussion of thallitim-activa ted sodiumiodide. NaI(TI), gamma ray systems is presented. Inaddition. no discussion of applications of ganmma rayspectroscopy arc presnted. The nieasiremeitprocedures (including calibration), analysis nelthods.inherent limitations, and overall precision and accuracyare specific to each application and are therelbre thesubject of separate application guides.An elementary introduclion to the concepisassociated with the application of G;etLU spectroscopyto problems of nuclear material assay is available.'Descriptions of the physical processes of gamma raydetection, discussiotIs of important instrumenlalionL. A. Kull, '.'An Introduction to (;C('Li) Uitsd NalGarnma-Ray Derectorz ror Safeiiuard% Applicauiiomu."ANL.AECA-103 (1973).USAEC REGULATORY GUIDES Copies of published quides may be obtained by request indicating the divisionsdeIlred to the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, Washington, D.C, 20545,Regulatory G ures.ae issued to describe and make avIiiablato the public Attention: DIrctot, of Regulatory Stendards. Comments and suggestions lotmethods acceptable to the AEC. Regulatory staff of specific parts Of Imptrovements in these guides are encouraged and should be sent to the Secretarythe Commilsio"'$ regulations, to techniques used by. the naff In of the Commission. 1U. Atomic Energy Commission, Washington. D.C. 20545,evaluating specIssc.probIems or poetuiatad accidents, or toprovtide guidance.to Attention: Chlef.PubltcPtoceedingsStaff.applicents. Guides are not subtiltules fat regulations and compliancewith them is not requited. Methods andrsolutions dilferent from those set out in The guides areIssued in the following ten broad divis!ons:the ipides will be acceptable it they providea bels'fot the findings reqiuisita tothe issuance or continuance of a permit.ot license by thecCommisionI'. L R Poesre ReacTrtors 6. Products2.'Resorch end Test neactots 7.. Teerssportetiors3." Fuels and Materlels Facilities B OccuPational HealthPublished guides will be revispe periodically. as appropriate. to ea-ommodate 4. Environmental end Siting 9. Antitrust Reviewcosm nd to reflect new inlermatlon or experience. 5. Materials and Plant Protection 10. General characteristics, and a step-by.step description of~a simpleassay problern.are. included in this document. Relevant*"information.presented :at a 'somewiat higher' technicallevel. including nomenclature and definitions. isinmiained in two useful standards documentls.2 -Thesedes. ribe .detailed techmiques for defining and..obtainingmeaningful peirormance data for Ge(Li) detectors andamplifiers. The glossary of technicalmterns found in both[ohese standards documents will priwve valuable to those" *Unfamiliar.it I gamma-ray. spectrosc pic nomenclature.Finall,..there :is a coiisiderable :amouit Of valuablebackgroundmnaterial published by he. manufacturers ofdetectors'aid associated 'electronic hardware which isavailable. fro ithemnon request.2. Functional DescriptionA. block diagram of those components of the Ge Li)spcctroscopy system which perform the data acquisition* funlction in material protection measurements is shownS" in Fig. I. lhe function of these components is first toconvert the charge produced by the interaction of anincident irmma ray with the Ge(Li)-delector into anamplified. analog electrical signal. The analog signal isthen converted into digilal information which can bestored, displayed, and otherwise processed byappropriate data reduction and analytical modules.3. Types of SystemsThere are three variations of the basic dataacquisition system presented in this guideline. This* variance in the basic configuration is the result -ofattempts to optimize each system to obtain specificassay information from certain types of material forms.The. three ..variations -of the basic system are' described below' and will be referred to by' Ronannumeral in the remain der of the document. (Forexample. System II refers to paragraph II below.)1. A' moderate to high efficiency system having an* .energy resolution which is adequate for assays ofmaterials for the fissile isotopes 24'Pu, 239Pu, 235 U.* and 2-13U. it can also be used to perform assays of* materials for fertile isotopes such as 2"1 Th and 2"%BUand to determine tile "ag" of plutonium samples from* measurements of their americium-241 content. This* system is used in those applications where Nal resolutionis inadequate to accurately resolve the gamma ray linesof the isotopes of interest from those from an interfering* " background. and where the lower efficiency Ge(Li)detector still provides sufficient sensitivity for practical`-Te-t Procedure for Amplifiers and Preamplificrs farSemiconductor Radiation IDoectors.' IEET Std 3011-969. TheInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. Inc. (1969).'"Tesi Procedures for Germanium Gamma-Ray Detectors.'.IE-EE Sid 325-1971. 'nt:e Institute cif 'leciricil and ElectronlcNEngineers. Inc, (1971).assay. work. The system is designed to measure gamnnmarays with energies greater than 120 keV.I!. A moderate to high efficiency system whichcan. satisfy all 'ihe requisites for System I and whirh. inaddition, hasth e improved energy resolution necessaryto.assay for the pltitonitmni isotopes 238 through 241..This system is commonly used to determine tile relativeradionuclide abundances and is designed to measuregamma rays with energies greater than 120 keV.Ill..A. system. designeUl specifically for low-energygamma ray..and X-ray 'spectroscopy (at gamma rayenergies less than 200 kcV) having an energy resolutionadequate to perform quantitative and qualitative.assaysof specially .prepared samples for the isotopes ofplutonium (238-241) and uranium (235 and 238).4. Equipment Acceptance PracticesStandard practices regarding the final acceptance ofequipment arc ustially prescribed by individualcompanies. laboratories, or departments. However. someof the following procedures have. beens found to beuseful in providing the user with the assurance that hewill acquire equipment which will perform as expectedin nuclear materialassay applications.Equipment descriptions .(including tile theory ofoperation) and instructional material covering operation.maintenamce. and servicing of all electronic componentsshould be supplied for individual components orcomplete systems. Such descriptions should includecomplete and accurate schematic diagrams for possiblein-house equipment servicing. Carefully specifiedoperational tests of system performance should be madeat the vendor's'facility and the original data supplied tothe- user before equipment delivery is scheduled, withfinal acceptance based. on the user's own performancedata taken at the user's facility.It is necessary to have calibration sources on handto verify the operational capabilities of the system. Thefollowing radioactive sources (with appropriateactivities) will provide sufficient counting rates toperform the tests specified in the regulatory position:"0Co- 10.30 MCi,',co-1-10o CiC. REGULATORY POSITIONLithium-drifted germanium, Ge(Li), gamma rayspectroscopy data acquisition systems meeting theoperating specifications given below are consideredadequate for use in special nuclear materials assay. Theselection of a system meeting these specifications isconsidered necessary but not suflicient for accurategamma ray spectroscopic assay requiring resolutionbetter than obtainable with Nal, No guarantee ofmeasurement quality as a result of the application ofsuch. systems should be assumed.I".. .*" ,:5.9-2'
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characteristics, and a stcp-by-step description of a.simpleassay problem are. included in this.document. Relevanthi .'ormation presented at a somewhatt higher technical.level. including nomenclature and definitions, is.contained. in two useful standards documents.2 .Thesede,;cribedetailed techniques for defining and obtaining" tmeaningful perfornmance data for Ge Li) detectors:andn
December 1983 U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
* aplifiers. The. glossayv o0f.technical terms found in both, these..standards docuiments Will prove valuable to those"ounfamiliar with camnia-rtvy spectroscopic nomenclature.Finally. there is a considerable amnount of valuable.background material published by tile inanufacturers ofdetectors and associated electronic hardware which isavailable from them on request.2. Functional DescriptionA block diagram of those components of the Ge( Li)*spectroscopy system which perform the data acquisitionfunction in .material protection measuremenis is shownin Fig. .I. The function of these components is first toconvert the charge produced by the interaction of anincident aninma ray wvith the Ge(Li) detector into anamplified, analog electrical signal. The analog signal isthen 'convertcd into digital information which can bestored., displayed, and otherwise processed byappropriate data reduction and analytical modules.3. Types of SystemsThere are, three -variations of the basic dataacquisition system presnted, in this guideline. :Thisvariance in thc basic configuration is tile result ofattempts to optimize each system to obtain specificassay information from certain types of material forms.The three variations of the basic system arcdescribed below and will be referred to by Romannumeral in the remainder of tile document. (Forexample, System 11 refers to paragraph 11 below.)*I. A moderate to high efficiency system having an* energy resolution which is adequate for assays ofmaterials for the fissile isotopes 24,Pu, 239pu, 2.15U.and 213U. It can also be used to perform assays ofmaterials for fertile isotopes such as 232Th and 231Uand to determine the -age" orplutoniunt samples frommeasurements of their americium-241 content. Thissystem is used in those applications where Nal resolutionis inadequate to accurately resolve the gamma ray linesof the isotopes of interest from those from an interferingbackground and where the lower efficiency Ge(Li)detector still provides sufficient sensitivity for practicalProcedure. for. Amplificr.ý and Preamplifiers forSerniconductor Radiatinn IDteetors'" IEE:. Std 301-1969. TheInstitute of Eteetricat and -leCtronies Engineers. Inc. (19691."Prncedurcs for Gernmniurn Ga"niaýRay De"tectors.-IF-.' Std 325-1.971. Tlhe Institute nlr Electrical and ElectrunicsEngineers. Inc. (1971).assay work. The system is designed to nmeasure gatnmarays with energies greater than 120 keV.II. A moderate to high efficiency system whichcan satisfy all the requisites for Systen I and which. inaddition, has thc imiproved energy resolution necessaryto assay. for tile plttoniuim isotopes 238 through 241.This system is commonly used to determine the relativeradionuclide abundances and is designed to measuregamma rays with energies greater than 120 keV.Ill. A system designed specilically for low-energygamma ray and X-ray spectroscopy (at gamma rayenergies less than 200 keV) having an energy resolutionadequate to perform quantitative and qualitative assaysof specially prepared samples for the isotopes ofplutonium (238-241) and uranium (235 and 238).4. Equipment Acceptance PracticesStandard practices regarding the final acceptance ofequipment are usually prescribed by individualcompanies. laboratories, or departments. However. someof the following procedures have beet, found to beuseful in providing the user with the assurance that liewill acquire equipment which will perform as expectedin nuclear material assay.applications.Equipment .descriptions (including the theory ofoperation) and instructional material covering operation.maintenance, and servicing of all electronic componentsshould be supplied .for individual components orcomplete systems. Such descriptions : should includecomplete and accurate schematic diagrams for possiblein-house, equipment servicing.. Carefully specifiedoperational tests of system performance should be madeat the vendor's facility and the original data supplied tothe user before equipment delivery is scheduled, withfimal, acceptance based on the user's own performancedata taken at the user's facility.It is necessary to have calibration sources on handto verify the operational capabilities of thie system. The* following radioactive sources (with appropriateactivities) will. provide sufficient counting rates toperform the tests specified in the regulatory position:6OCo- 10-30 /CiI 7Co-I-10upCiC. REGULATORY POSITIONLithium-drifted germanium, Gc(Li), gamma rayspectroscopy data acquisition systems meeting theoperating specifications given below are consideredadequate for use in special nuclear materials assay. Theselection of a system meeting these specifications, isconsidered. necessary but. not sufficient for accurategamma ray spectroscopic. assay requiring resolitilionbetter than obtainable :with Nal. No. guarantee, ofmeasurement quality as a result of the application ofsuch sys!ems should be assumed.5.92
REGULATORY GUIDE
".Q'" iThe .enipho %is here ison the 1perating specificationsrelated to the overall performance off tile entire .data* acquisition system. Component specilicat ions have~beenincluded in Appendix A to provide guidance in theselectiol,; of original Or replacenten I co1Iponen S whichare essential if adequate system performance is to be* attained. The system operating performance s,,hould notbe deduced from the component performances: overallsystem performance should be checked independentlyand compared to tile operating specifications presentedhere.1. Energy Resolution and Peak Shape(Systems 1, 11, 111) The eniergy resolution of the.system should be measured according to the procedure* specified in IEEE Standard 325-197i,4 with thefollowing additional stipulations: (I) the peaking time"for the shaping amplifier should be no. greater than 4.pseec (2) the total number of counts in tthe Ltnterchannel of the peak should be no less than 104 counts;(3) the count rate during the measurement should be inthe range 102 to 10-1 counts per second as measuredwith a total count rate meter. The full width of the peakat half maximum (FWHM) and full width attenth-maximum (FWTM) are as defined in IEEEStandard 325-1971.6 The full width at 1/50 maximum(FW.02M) is defined in a similar manner. The energyresolution and peak shape specifications for each of thesystems (I i1, 111)are given in Table I and the measured.values should be no greater than those shown here.These values have been determined to be necessaryfortheapplications defined in B.3. above.2. Detection Efficiency(Systems 1, 11) The full energy peak efficiency (inpercent) is defined relative to the full energy peakefficiency of a 3 in. x 3 in. Nal(TI) scintillation detectorfor 1.33 MeV gamma rays (6'Co) at a source.detectordistance of 25.0 cm. The detailed procedures fordetermining the. efficiency in accordance with thisdefinitionare presented in IEEE Standard 325.1971.LTile efficiency required for specific assayapplications should be determined .by estimating thegamma ray intensity at the detector from a sample ofknown...strength and the counting rates required tocollect a statistically significant number of counts underS'IEEE Sid 325-1971, op. cit.. Srction 4.'Peaking time-the time required for a pulse to reach itsmaximum height. Peaking times can be easily measured with anoscilloscope and are less susceptible to misinterpretation than arcRC time constants. The relationship between RC time constants.and peaking time varies as their is no standard method fordefining RC time constants in semi-Gaussian shaping networks.6 IEEE Sid 325-197 1, op. cit., Section 3.7 Ibid., Section 5.2.the. spectrutm lpeaks of interest in a reasonahle period oftime. Est intates should be corrected for.sample-to-detector distance and tlie effects of absorbingmaterials placed between tile sample and detector.Whenever possible. it. is advisable Ito make preliminarymeasurements oin tile samples under consideralion withan available detector, and the efficiency of t(ie optimaldeleclor determined by extrapolating the meastredresults. A Ilumni:al estilalte of the detector.efficicncy (..Isdefined above) required for most applications, isapproximately 8%1: however, detectors with elficienciesa ithe rang " of 5 _ o 20., are ill use For nuclear materialassays. (To assist in providing some perspective here. an8%,` detector as speciflied above has an active volumnL ofabout 40 cc while 5 to 207, detectors have voltmes ofabout 25 cc to 110 cc. respectively. Art , detector hasabsolute detection efficiencies of about 15 x .1"T4 185keV, 4.5 x 10-4 (a: 411 keV. and 0.96 x 10" .(a 1.33MeV at a source-detector sepai:itionrof 25 cm.)(Systemn i11) The method described above fordetermining the detection efficiency witlh a high energygamma ray source is not relevant for detectors used inlow-energy gamma ray spectroscopy. Instead. it is moreappropriate to specify. (I) the active volume of thedetector and (2) the maximum effect of absorbingmaterials (absorbing materials include detector surfacc"dead layers," gold surface plating, and the end capwindow of the cryostat). The following specificationsare therefore given for the low-energy gamma raysystem:a. detector volume- 1.0 to 1.5 ccb. drift depletion depth--0.5 to 0;7 cmc. layers of absorbing material between theradiation source and the active volume of the detectormust be thin enough so that the 14.4 keV peak from as 7Co source is at least 5 times the conlitiltuinbackground under the peak."3. Count Rate CapabilitiesThe following specifications are related to asystem's ability to maintain adequate energy resolutionat high co.unt rates.(Systems I. 11) The system should be capable ofo0ratingvat a" total counting rate of: 104 cps from aCo source (as measuredwith a total count rate meter)with less than a 10% i,-,lative increase in.the 1.33 MeVpeak width at 1/10 the maximum peak height (,VTM&#xfd;as compared to the FWTM value measured at 102 ito 10:cps.(System Ill) The system should be capable ofoperating at a total counting rate of 5 x 103 cps fiomi as Co source (as measured with it total count rate ittler)"Care should he^ taken to ensure that the "Co saiurc:encapsulation is *.thin cenough. (<1 0( ng/cut2 plsi ic or .tteequivalent) so that self absorption in the source itself is norsignificant.__ _" " '." 5.9-3 witlh less than a I T0 relathe increac in the FWHM and.W * .M ol'the 1 2 keV peak as" iCOipared to th6 values* ..obtained at .O 1 c. .4. Peak-to-Coinpton Ratio.s L(S selI1,i) The peak-lo-Comlpton. ratio for tie.. .33 MeV peak Irom a Co source. as detined in I-EEStandard 325-197 1' should be greater than the valuesspecilied in. T'lhk&#xfd; 2 for 'corresponding detector-e fficienc-ies.* (System 1Il) Tlifis specification is not applicable.* 5. Linearity and Stability(Systenis I, Ii, Ill) The integral non linearity of thedata acquisition system's ener,, calibration should beless than 0.2-." over the top 95%' of the ADC. range. The* ystcm n .nlitiarity should be measured uwing a set of-:l "Sid 325-1971 , p. cit.. Section 3.4.well-known pillma ray soutces and the proecduredscribed in the literature.'The long.term stability requirement for the system'szero channel and g aiti shOuld be defined as follows: thedrift in die position of a spectrum peak front acalibration source shotld be less thin 0.1"'l (compared tofull. scale) in a 24-hour period at constant roomteln'perature. (For example, tie centroid of a calibrationpeak placed in approximately channel 4000 of a 4096channel spectrum should not vary in position by morethan .4 channels over a 24-hnur period.) Tiie temperaturecoefficient of the systenm's zero channel and gain shouldbe less thau 0.02%0.,,C in the temperature range from O"to 50"C." R. C. Greenwood, R. G. Ilcimer. and R. G. Gehrke."Precise Comparison and Measuiement of Gamma-Ray Energieswith a GOtLi) Detector I. 50-420 kcV,," Nuct. Instr. and Methods77. 141 (197W).R. G. Wnlmer, R. C. Greenwood and R. G. Gehrke,"Precise Comparison and Measurcment of Gamma-Ray Energieswith a Ge(Li) Detector It. 400-1300 ke,," Nuclear. Insir. andMethods 96. 173 (1971.)5.9-4m APPENDIX ACOMPONENT SPECIFICATIONS3. Preamplifiers1. Detector Crystal Geometry(Systcms. I,.II)The dctector should be of' tie closedend.. coaxial drift. right :circular. cylinder t)yp: 0hicon figuraation has the Iit;ixinttitn fraction oftusable activcvolume:fit r detecturslof noderate tolhigh cfliciency. Thecrystal diameter should be approximnailclv equal to iblength to minimizc any Unusual e'f'icienicy vs. gcunteirv* effects. The active volume or the detector shouldcomprise at least '0'i.- 61' t[lie total crystal volumne withthe undrifled core diameter kept as sitall aseconomically possible. This maximizes [lie prob:tabilily!that a ganima-ray- interactiui will appear ill tile fill]energy pcak of the spectrum. (Note: The specificationott peak-to-Compton ratio given in Section ('.4 isdirectly related to the crystal's aclive/total volume atio.](System Ill) The detector shotuld be of the planartype. Small detectors of this configuration offer the bestresolution available for low-energy, gamma rays.Operating specifications are given in Section C.2 thatdefine the allowable thickness of detector surface .deadlayers" which absorb low-energy gamma rays beforethey interact in the detector's active volume.S (Systems I, II, Ill) Methods for specifying thephysical size for tlte: detector crystals are covered inSection C.2.* 2. Detector Mounting and Cryostat Description(Systems 1, III) There are four detector cryostatconfigurations Which are typically' available: (I) rightangle dip-stick, (2) upright dip.stick. (3) gravity feed.and (4) side entry (portable). Of these, the right angledip-stick is widely used for Systems I and I1 and theupright dip-stick for System III: the configurationselected should be that considered to be most useful fora specific application. For reliable operation. the vacuumin the detector housing should be maintained by azeolite getter. It is recommended that the liquid nitrogenDewar have a minimum capacity of about 30 liters and aholding time of at least 10 days. The Dewar should havea connection which allows replenishment of the liquidnitrogen supply without removing the cryostat. Aseparate high-voltage input to the cryostat housingshould be provided in the event it is necessary ordesirable :to apply a detector bias which exceeds therating of. the preamplifier's high-voltage input. It isrecommended that the high-voltage input be clearlymarked and located at least 2.0 cm from thepreamplifier signal output. The distance between theS detector's front surface. and the window in the housingshould be less than or equal to 1.0 cm to allow one toachieve minimal detector-sample separations whennecessary.S(Systems 1, II) It tamy cases prcampliler.sComp'it iible with nuclear material speclroscorpyapplications are purchased in combination with :a Ge( Li)crystal as a package. The detector specificationst here fore relate to the d e t Cc Itor-prCetupliflCrcombi;ia lion: however. tile following additiUnals pecifications should he included in the selection of .illoptimal system. A charge sensitive preamtplihlie shtmildhe nmottned on t lie cryostat near lite detector. The fieldeffect transistor (WET) in ite first staye o1 tlieTi..mld lw operated at room tellrirature(_300"i'K ' Tile detector sihtuld he d.c. coripled (:Isopposcd .o c.,p:,.'itively coupled) to tile aic of tle itpul* stage of' tire 1i c.1triplilher for better ctenergy resohulion.The tti lowing procedures arc iccniittended tominimize the probability of destroying thei F1 " dtie todetector warmup or high-voltage Irantsients. Posilivc highvoltage should be used, and the: e should be at lcast onefilter section placed in t(le system interntalto the cryostat. At least one filter should also be placedexternal to the cryostat to reduce tile possibility of shorlcircuiting due to condensate formation on thie internalfilter. The total RC time constant of the filter networkshould be at least 30 seconds.(System I1l) Sanme as above for Systenms I and IIexcept that the FET in the preantiplifier's first stageshould he located within the cyrostat and operated itliquid nitrogen (LN) temperature. Att LN cooled 17ET isrequired, to achieve the excellent eiergy resolutioncharacteristics of this system.4. Main Amplifier(Systems I, I1. i11) A main amplifier with adjustablepgin should include unipolat. senti-Gaussia," pulseshaping networks with adjustable titiCe constantscorresponding to peaking times between I atnd S usec. ( Ito 4 psec peaking times are typically used for Systemts Iand II while peaking titnes as long as 8 ,isec could beused in System I1l.) This choice fl" antplifier providesminimum resolving time for a given energy resolutionand sufficient flexibility to optimize the amplifiercharacteristics for most' counting conditions. Nominalspecifications to aid in identifyiing this class ofamplifiers. commonly referred to as spectroscopyamplifiers, include the following: linear range 0 to IOV.integral nonlinearity <0.05%. temperature stability<100 ppm gain shiftrc. attd thermal noise <5.,V rats2 ISystern II only) Tle preamplifncr\ First stape F-lV maybe located within the keryo,;iai and operated at liquiid nitmtgentemnperatures, but in order to faeiliLaie poSible ITTreplacement. it is recomntended Ihat a detectorl he electu-dwhich attains adequate energy resolturion with an l.T.5.9.5I..L~.
OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REGULATORY RESEARCH
referred t0 the input for 4 u.sec peaking times (the.noiselevel varies inversely withthc peaking time). The mainanipliier %should be a standard NIM'3 module... .......At tin atesgreater than. 0-1 cps, problemsU. " I es a'dtgtadation of the:energy resolution resulting in.loss of counts. in the. spectrurn peaks begin to occur."..Thes effects are due. to.the overlap of portions of tw'oor 0.orL pulses in.time and to bas.line fluctuations. The.t .nagniitude of. Ihese effects can be mininized by tlieinclision Ofatile. following Ifatures in the amplifier'sdesitl-. (I ) a. b.baseline.. restorer.:(BLR) circuit at. theamnphi ocvrvut.pu and. (21) pole-zero. cancelled couplingnetworks.7TheiBLR circuit shouldbe adjustable for bothlow ind high couhiting lte..conditions.. .5. Analog to Digital Converter (ADC)(Systems I, Ii, .ll) The ADC should be capable ofdigitizing pulse amplitudes from the amplifier in therange of 0 to 10 volts in at least 409)6 channels. Thefrquency of thle internal clock should be at least 50ne,,ah,'tz to handle high counting rates with nominal" AD)C dead time losses. The integral nonlinearity shouldbe less .than 0.15% over the top 95%, of full scale and thedifferential nonlinearity should be less.than 1.0% overthe. top 95% of full scale for semi-Gaussian pulses withpeakingtirnes of I.to psec. These linearity specificationsare. not .siringent. but:. are *adequate to enableidentification of unknown peaks. which may.. appear in aspectrum...The short-term zero channel arid gain drifts should* be < .01%/f(?C and 4 .02%0rC, respectively (thepercentage refers to full scale), in the temperature rangefront 00. to 500C. For long term stability, the peak from*3NtM-Nuclear Instrument Module. see USAEC -TechnicalInformation Document. Standard Nuclear Instrument Modules.Revision 3. TID-20893 (1969L..t' 4For more details on BLR circuits see V. Radeka, "Effectof 'Baseline Restoration' on Signal-to-Notre Ratio in PulseAmplitude Mteasurements," Rev. Sci. Instr. 38. 1397 ( 1967).a stable pulsershould not shift by more than onechannel over a 24,hour period.for a line voltage of 115V-li,. 50-65 Hz,7and at constant room temperature.(Note: The. ADC. drift and.linearity. specifications areclosely ..re!'ttcd :to the.. overall system stability andlirearity operating specifications described in SectionC.5.)"Fhc ADC should be capable of being DC coupled tothe main aniplifier in order that BLR circuits can beused. A digital: offset capability in the ADC isrecommended. (Note: In some systems the ADC is anintegral -part of a multichannel analyzer, a unit whichalso performnsi.the, funct ions .of.data storage, display, andsometimes rudimentary analysis. These latter functionsare taken. up :in Part 2 of this series. In multichannelanalyzersystems, however, the ADC function is usuallyspecified separately and can be compared with the aboverecommendations.)(System 1) For certain applicatiuns where energyresolution is definitely not critical, all the ADCspecifications above are applicable with the exceptionthat a 1024 channel capacity with a 1024 digital offsetmay be adequate to provide a sufficiently small energyinterval per channel (keV/channel) to cover a limitedenergy range of.. interest. It should be emphasized,however, that this choice may restrict the effective useof the system for other applications.6. Power Supplies(Systems I,. II, .111) The system power supplies(detector high- voltage, preamplifier, and NIM bin)should be capable of operating the system within theoperating specifications listed in Section C.i whensupplied with 115 volts (+/- 10%) at 50 to 65 hertz (atconstant room temperature). The detector bias powersupply should have an adjustable output that is shortcircit protected.with automatic power restoration afterremoval of the short. The maximum outputvoltage .isdetermined by detector requirements; 5 kilovolts issufficient for most applications.0. ,:..5.9-6 TABLE 1ENERGY RESOLUTION AND PEAK SHAPESPECIFICATIONSSYSTEM ICalibration SourceGamma Ray EnergyFWHM (keVI'ic o- 133 Q key&#xfd;"Co- 122 keV6'0CO- 1332 keyFW.02MtFWHMless than 2.7less than 2.81.625SYSTEM II1.01.9SYSTEM IIIless than 2..less titan 2.8less than 2.5less than 2.5'Co-5.9 keV (Fe X-ray)S'7Co- 122 keV0.320.55TABLE 2.PEAK-TO-COMPTON RATIO VS. DETECTOR EFFICIENCYMiiuDetector Efficiency(As defined in Section C.2)5%10701o%20%MinimumPeak-to-Compton Ratio20:13o:135:138:15 LIQUIDNITROGEN'DEWARDIGITAL OUTPUTANALOG TO DATA STORAGEPREAMPLIFIER AMPLIFIER TO DIGITAL DISPLAYS, DATACONVERTER REDUCTION ANDANALYTICAL MODULESFigure 1.-BLOCK DIAGRAM OF A Ge(Li) DATA ACQUISITION SYSTEM5.9-8
REGULATORY GUIDE 5.9 (Task SG 042-2)  
..,UNITED STATESATOMIC =ENERGY COMMISSIONWASHINGTON. C._ 20545June 29, 1973TO REGULATORY GUIDE DISTRIBUTION LIST (DIVISION 5)Enclosed for your information and use are copies (which may be reproduced)of the following regulatory guides:Regulatory Guide 5.7 -"Control of Personnel Access to ProtectedAreas, Vital Areas, and Material Access Areas"Regulatory Guide 5.8 -"Design Considerations for Minimizing ResidualHoldup of Special Nuclear Material in Dryingand Fluidized Bed Operations."Regulatory Guide 5.9 -"Specifications for Ge(Li) Spectroscopy Systemsfor Material Protection Measurements -Part I:Data Acquisition."The Division 5 Regulatory Guides are being developed to provide guidanceon the acceptability of specific materials and plant protection relatedfeatures of nuclear facilities licensed to possess special nuclear* umaterial. Enclosed are a table of contents of issued Division 5 guidesand a list of additional guides in this division currently beingdeveloped.
GUIDELINES FOR GERMANIUM SPECTROSCOPY SYSTEMS
FOR MEASUREMENT OF SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL


Sincerely,es~erog~e~rstDirector of Regulatory Standards
==A. INTRODUCTION==
Section 70.51, "Material Balance, Inventory, and Records Requirements," of 10 CFR Part 70, "Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material," requires, in part, that licensees authorized to possess at any one time more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material establish and maintain a system of control and accountability so that the standard error (estimator) of any inventory difference, ascertained as a result of a measured material balance, meets established minimum standards. The selection and proper application of an adequate measurement method for each of the material forms in the fuel cycle is essential for the maintenance of these standards.


===Enclosures:===
Many types of nondestructive assay (NDA) measurements on special nuclear material (SNM) can involve, or even
As stated}}
>
require, a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system.
 
This guide is intended both to provide some general guide lines acceptable to the NRC staff for the selection of such systems and to point out useful resources for more detailed information on their assembly, optimization, and use in material protection measurements.
 
Any guidance in this document related to information collection activities has been cleared under OMB Clearance No. 3150-0009.
 
==B. DISCUSSION==
 
===1. BACKGROUND ===
Gamma ray spectroscopy systems are used for NDA of various special nuclear material forms encountered in the nuclear fuel cycle, both for quantitative determination of the SNM content and for the determination of radio nuclide abundances.
 
Applications of high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy have multiplied greatly in recent years. The samples encoun tered range from fresh fuel rods and reprocessing solutions to boxes and cans of uncharacterized waste material. Meas urement conditions also vary widely from controlled laboratory environments to the unpredictable plant environ ment that can be hostile to the measurement equipment and can often contribute serious background interferences to the spectral data. As a result, there is no single gamma ray assay system that can be effective in all cases. The system chosen for a particular NDA task must therefore be determined from careful consideration of all factors that may affect the measurement and of the requirements for the precision and accuracy of the assay.
 
The scope of this guide is limited to the consideration of high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy with lithium-drifted germanium, Ge(Li), or high-purity germanium, HPGe (also referred to as intrinsic germanium, IG), detectors. No discussion of thallium-activated sodium iodide, NaI(Tl), or lithium-drifted silicon, Si(Li),
gamma ray systems is presented. In addition, no discussion of specific NDA
applications of gamma ray spectroscopy is provided. The measurement procedures (including calibration), analysis methods, Inherent limitations, and overall precision and accuracy attainable are specific to each application and are therefore the subject of separate application guides. Guide lines for measurement control, calibration, and error analysis of NDA measurements are dealt with in detail in Regulatory Guide 5.53, "Qualification, Calibration, and Error Estimation Methods for Nondestructive Assay,"
which endorses ANSI N15.20-1975, "Guide to Calibrating Nondestructive Assay Systems."1 ANSI N15.20-1975 was reaffirmed in 1980.
 
&#xfd;X of the major commercial vendors of Ge(Li) and HPGe detectors and the associated electronics maintain up-to-date documentation on the specifications of currently available equipment, as well as a variety of useful and infor mative notes on applications. This literature is available The substantial number of channes in this revision has made it Impractical to Indicate the changes with lines in the margin.
 
1Covpies of this standard may be obtained from the American National Standards Institute, Inc., 1430 Broadway, New York, New York 10018.
 
USNRC REGULATORY GUIDES
Comments should be sent to the Secretary of the Commission.
 
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555.
 
Regulatory Guides are Issued to describe and make available to the Attention: Docketing and Service Brancn.
 
public methods acceptable to the NRC staff of implementing specific parts of the Commission's regulations, to delineate tech- The guides are Issued In the following ten broad divisions:  
niques used by the staff in evaluating specific problems or postu iated accidents or to provide guidance to applicant
 
====s. Regulatory ====
 
===1. Power Reactors ===
6. Products Guides are nof substitutes for regulations, and compliance with
2. Research and Test Reactors
7. Transportation them Is not required. Methods and solutions different from those set
3. Fuels and Materials Facilities S. Occupational Health out in the guides will be acceptable If they provide a basis for the
4. Environmental and Siting
9. Antitrust and Financial Review findings requisite to the issuance or continuance of a permit or
5. Materials and Plant Protection 10. General license by the Commission.
 
Copies of issued guides may be purchased at the current Government This guide was Issued after consideration of comments received from Printing Office price. A subscription service for future guides in spe the public. Comments and suggestions for Improvements in these cific divisions is available through the Government Printing Office.
 
guides are encouraged at all times, and guides will be revised, as Information on the subscription service and current GPO prices may appropriate, to accommodate comments and to reflect new informa- be obtained by writing the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, tion or experience.
 
Washington, D.C. 20555, Attention: Publications Sales Manager.
 
from the manufacturers upon request, and the potential customer may use this literature as a source of the most current information on the highest quality systems available.
 
Finally, the potential user ought to consult with those individuals currently active in the field of nondestructive assay of special nuclear material and seek their advice in the particular assay problem being considered.
 
2. BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
An annotated bibliography is included in this regulatory guide to provide more detailed information on spectros copy systems and their use.
 
Elementary introductions to the concepts associated with the application of high-resolution gamma ray spectros copy to problems of nuclear material assay are available in Augustson and Reilly and in Kull. These works discuss the physical processes of gamma ray detection and impor tant instrumentation characteristics. More advanced dis cussion of gamma ray detectors and associated electronics may be found in Knoll and in Adams and Dams. A thorough treatise on the associated electronics is available in Nicholson.
 
In addition, extensive discussion of a variety of NDA tech niques and the implementation of some of these techniques with high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy may be found in Sher and Untermeyer, in Rogers, and in Reilly and Parker. Detailed descriptions of detector efficiency and energy calibration procedures are available in section D of Knoll and also in Hajnal and Klusek; in Hansen, McGeorge, and Fink; in Hansen et aL; and in Roney and Seale.
 
Relevant technical information beyond the introductory level, including nomenclature and definitions, is contained in three useful standards of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976, "Test Procedures for Amplifiers and Preamplifiers for Semi conductor Radiation Detectors for Ionizing Radiation," 2 ANSI/IEEE Std 325-1971, "Test Procedures for Germanium Gamma-Ray Detectors" 2 (reaffirmed in 1977), and ANSI/
IEEE Std 645-1977, "Test Procedures for Hifh-Purity Germanium Detectors for Ionizing Radiation,""
which supplements ANSI/IEEE Std 325-1971. These describe detailed techniques for defining and obtaining meaningful performance data for Ge(Li) and HPGe detectors and amplifiers.
 
/
3. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
A block diagram of a typical high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system is shown in Figure 1. In such a system, the solid state Ge(Li) or HPGe detector converts some or all of the incident gamma ray energy into a proportional amount of electric charge, which can be analyzed by the subsequent electronics. The detector output is converted into an analog voltage signal by the preamplifier, which is may be obtained from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., 34S East 47th Street, New York, New York 10017.
 
an integral part of the detector package. The preamplifier signal is further amplified and shaped and is then converted into digital information that can be stored, displayed, and otherwise processed by the data reduction and analytical components of the system.
 
===4. TYPES OF SYSTEMS ===
High-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy systems are distinguished primarily by the type (p-type or n-type) and the configuration (planar or coaxial) of detector used. For assay applications involving the measurement of low-energy gamma radiation (i.e., energies below approximately
200 keV), a thin planar HPGe or Ge(Li) crystal is most appropriate. A coaxial detector crystal with a larger volume is much better suited for higher energy gamma ray measure ments (i.e., for energies above approximately 120 keV). 
The distinction between these two types of detectors is not sharp. For instance, there ma&#xfd; be some applications above
120 keV in which a planar detector would be useful to render the system less sensitive to interferences from ambient high-energy gamma radiation.
 
It should be noted that Ge(Li) detectors have no real advantage over HPGe detectors with comparable perform ance specifications. In addition, Ge(Li) detectors require constant liquid nitrogen (LN) cooling, even when not in operation. HPGe detectors are, of course, also operated at LN temperature, but they can be stored at room tempera ture. This is an advantage to potential users who may have extended plant shutdowns. It also prevents complete loss of a detector due to operator procedure error, which can happen with a Ge(Li) detector when Ll4 cooling is not continuously maintained. This added convenience and the greater ruggedness of the HPGe detectors make them especially attractive for in-plant NDA applications.
 
5. EQUIPMENT ACCEPTANCE PRACTICES
Equipment descriptions and instructional material covering operation, maintenance, and: servicing of all electronic components are supplied by the manufacturer for all individual modules or complete systems. Such descriptions should include complete and accurate sche matic diagrams for possible in-house equipment servicing.
 
Complete operational tests of system performance are to be made at the vendor's facility, and the original data are supplied to the user upon delivery of the equipment.
 
Extensive performance testing of all systems by the user is generally not necessary.3 However, qualitative verification of selected equipment performance specifications and detector resolution is recommended.
 
It is necessary to have calibration sources on hand to verify the operational capabilities of the system. The following radioactive sources (with appropriate activities)
3Although the quality control and presh.pment testing proce.
 
dures of the commercial vendors of detectors and associated elec.
 
onuic, h~ave improved and are quite dependable, some user verifica.
 
tion of the specifications claimed by the manufacturer Is strongly recommended.
 
5.9-2 K
 
I
I
I
\\
I
I
I
I
Uquld I
Nitrogen High Dewa Voltage I
(Cooling)
Supply Spectrum f
.Stabilization I
Spectroscopy I
Analog-to-Digital I
Detector Preamplifier Amplifier Conversion I
I
I
I.
 
I
,
I
II
Count I
Rate Scaler Data storage, display, and data reduction and analysis I
components I
I
I
FIGURE 1 A block diagram of a typical setup of a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system. The dashed boxes indicate which sets of modules are usually packaged as one component in commercially available systems. Liquid nitrogen cooling of the detector is required for proper operation of the system, but the field-effect transistor (FET) in the preamplifier input stage may or may not be cooled, depending upon the type of detector used and the energy resolution desired. A scaler is shown connected to the main amplifier, a common method of monitoring the total system count rate. For long-term data acquisi tion, spectrum stabilization is recommended, and the method is indicated here by a stabilizer module in communication with the analog-to-digital converter (ADC).
5.9-3
 
will provide sufficient counting rates to verify the energy resolution specifications of the manufacturer and to carry out any other performance tests desired by the user:
60Co 10-30 pCi, Gamma ray energies: 1173,1332 keV
5 7 CO
1-10 j0i, Gamma ray energies: 14, 122, 136 keV
 
==C. REGULATORY POSITION==
Ge(Li) or HPGe gamma ray spectroscopy data acquisi tion systems meeting the general guidelines outlined briefly below are considered more than adequate for use in SNM
assay requiring resolution better than that obtainable with Na! detectors. The potential user should select the detector and associated electronics that meet the needs of the partic ular assay task required, with careful consideration of all factors that could affect the quality of the assay.
 
1. DETECTOR PERFORMANCE
Excellent performance, routinely available in coaxial germanium detectors, may be represented by energy resolutions (FWHM) 4 of approximately 1.7 keV at 1332 keV
(60 Co) and approximately 0.7 keV at 122 keV (5 Co) for detectors with efficiencies up to 20 percent.5 The full width at 0.1 maximum (FWTM) for such detectors is typically up to 1.9 times the FWHM. For these higher efficiency detec tors, "peak-to-Compton ratios" are usually quoted in the range of 25 to 40. These ratios are strong functions of resolution, efficiency, and exact detector crystal geometry, and no typical values can be given without knowledge of all of these parameters. Coaxial detectors with this kind of resolution will usually have cooled field-effect transistor (FET) preamplifiers and an energy-rate capability of approximately 50,000 MeV/sec. 6 Room temperature pre amplifiers have somewhat worse resolution but have rate capabilities on the order of 150,000 MeV/sec.
 
The resolution of planar detectors is a stronger function of the crystal size and shape than that of coaxial detectors, so representative resolutions cannot be given over a range of sizes. As an example from the middle of the range of sizes usually offered, an excellent 2 cm 3 planar detector (le.,
2 cm 2 front face area x 1 cm thick) would have a resolution of approximately 0.5 keV at 122 keV (5 7Co) and 0.21 keV
at 5.9 keV (Mn X-ray from SaFe decay). Planar detectors
4The full width of the gamma ray photopeak at half of its maximum height (FWHM) is defined in ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976.
 
SThe full-energy peak efficiency (in percent) is defined relative to the full-energy peak efficiency of a 3-in. J.n. NaI(TI) scintilla tion detector for 1332-keV gamma rays v Co) at a source-to.
 
detector distance of 25 cm. The detailed procedures for determining the efficiency in accordance with this definition are presented in Section 5.2 of ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976.
 
6Counting rate capabilities, expressed In MSV/sec, denote the maximum charge-to-voltay. conversion rate of which the pre amplifier Is capable. For " Co, a SO,000-MeV/sec rate capability corresponds to a pulse iunting rate limitation of approximately
80,000 counts/se
 
====c. For Co a ====
000-MeV/sec rate capability also corresponds to a pulse rate limitation of approximately 80,000
counts/sec. Of course, nuclear material assays should be performed at count rates well below these limiting values in order to minimize rate-related losses from pulse pileup and dead time.
 
will always have LN-cooled FET preamplifiers in order to achieve the excellent resolution of these systems. The preamplifier feedback loop may be either pulsed optical or resistive,7 and the system will have fairly modest rate capabilities in the range of 5000 MeV/sec. 6 It is important to decouple the detector from noisy mechanical environ ments to avoid microphonic pickup.
 
2. ELECTRONICS PERFORMANCE
For ease of use, maintenance, and replacement of the components in a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system, the electronic components should be standard nuclear instrument modules (NIM) (Ref. 1), with the possible exception of the pulse-height analysis (Le., multi channel analyzer) components. Pulse signals should be transmitted from module to module in shielded coaxial cable to minimize the effects of possible electronic noise from nearby machinery at the measurement site. The cables should have a characteristic impedance that matches the terminations used in the NIM modules (generally 93 ohms). 
The system power supplies (detector high voltage, preamplifier, and NIM bin) should be capable of operating the system within the operating specifications when supplied with 115 volts (+10 percent) at 50 to 65 hertz (at constant room temperature). The power supplied for the detection system should be stabilized against voltage shifts in order to maintain resolution. The output voltage of the detector bias supply is determined by the detector requirements; 5 kilo volts is sufficient for most applications.
 
The main amplifier, commonly referred to as the spectros copy amplifier, should have variable gain and pulse-shaping controls for maximum setup flexibility. Most high-quality amplifiers are equipped with baseline restoration and pole-zero cancellation circuits (Ref. 2), which greatly improve the resolution that can be achieved on a routine basis. Baseline restoration is essential for assay situations in which count rates in excess of several kilohertz are antici pated. Pulse pileup suppression is also a useful feature, if available; it may be found in some spectroscopy amplifiers and even in separate NIM modules designed for that purpose.
 
Electronic components should be obtained with state-of the-art linearity and temperature sensitivity. Maintenance of long-term gain stability may require the use of a spec trum stabilizer. Centroid variations of a stabilization peak of less than one channel in a 4096-channel spectrum are achievable with commercially available stabilizer modules.
 
Stabilization peaks can be provided either by a pulser or by a radioactive source. Generally, a radioactive source is preferred because it contributes less distortion to the gamma ray spectrum and has a stable (although decaying)
emission rate. Furthermore, stabilization peaks from natural sources may be obtained from existing peaks in the assay spectrum itself, which simplifies the assay
7Feedback methods for charge-sensithve preamplifiers are dis cussed thoroughly in Chapter 5 of Reference 2.
 
K\\
5.9-4
 
setup. Dead-time and pileup corrections may also be performed using a pulser or a separate radioactive source fixed to the detector. The latter method is preferred for the reasons stated above.
 
3. SYSTEM SELECTION AND USE
The detailed requirements and constraints of a particular measurement situation will cause wide variation in the optimum choice of systems, even within a fairly well-defined application. For example, a requirement for high through put may dictate higher efficiency detectors and highly automated data acquisition electronics. Anticipated inter ferences from uranium, thorium, or fission products may make the best possible system resolution the most impor tant consideration. Severe operating environments may make the use of digital stabilization highly desirable. Con straints of space and location could dictate an unusually small LN dewar with automatic filling capacity. The list of such considerations in a given situation can be long, and each situation should be considered carefully and indi vidually in order to achieve a system that can acquire the required measurement data.
 
Beyond the choice of data acquisition systems, many other factors influence the successful use of gamma ray spectroscopy in quantitative assay measurements. Some of these are:
a. Gamma Ray Signatures: The energies and intensities of the relevant gamma rays place fundamental restrictions on the sensitivity, precision, and accuracy of any assay. The range of gamma ray energies of interest also determines the type of gamma ray detector appropriate for optimum efficiency.
 
b.
 
Full-Energy Peak Area Determination:
The proce dure for extracting this fundamental information from the spectral data will be determined by the complexity of the gamma ray spectra as well as the intensity and complexity of the gamma ray background at energies near the peaks of interest.
 
c.
 
Gamma Ray Attenuation by the Samples and Sur rounding Materials: Corrections for this effect are essential for accurate assays. The importance of this correction will increase as the gamma ray energies of interest decrease and the absorptive power of the sample and surrounding mate rials increases.
 
All of this emphasizes that by far the most important factor in choosing an appropriate data acquisition system, in Implementing proper assay procedures, and in supervising the assay operations is a highly competent person, prefera bly experienced in gamma ray spectroscopy and its appli cation to assay measurements of special nuclear materials.
 
Such a person, with the assistance of the existing literature and of others in the gamma ray field, will be able to consid er a particular application in detail and choose an appro priate detector and electronics to create a data acquisition system that is well suited to the required assay task.
 
5.9-5
 
REFERENCES
1. L Costrell, "Standard Nuclear Instrument Modules,"
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, TID.20893, Revi sion 3, 1969.
 
2. P. W. Nicholson, Nuclear Electronics, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1974.
 
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adams, F., and R. Dams, Applied Gamma-Ray Spectros copy, Pergamon Press, New York, 1970.
 
This work provides a comprehensive coverage of back ground material pertinent to the gamma ray spectros copist.
 
Considerable information is provided on both Nal and Ge detectors.
 
Augustson, R. H., and T. D. Reilly, "Fundamentals of Passive Nondestructive Assay of Fissionable Material," Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, LA-565 I-M, 1974.
 
This manual contains helpful introductory descriptions of NDA applications of gamma ray spectroscopy, as well as some discussion of gamma ray detection systems.
 
Hajnal, F., and C. Klusek, "Semi-Empirical Efficiency Equations for Ge(Li) Detectors," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 122, p. 559, 1974.
 
Hansen, J., J. McGeorge, and R. Fink, "Efficiency Calibra tion of Semiconductor Detectors in the X-Ray Region,"
Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 112, p. 239, 1973.
 
Hansen, J., et al., "Accurate Efficiency Calibration and Properties of Semiconductor Detectors for Low-Energy Photons," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 106, p. 365, 1973.
 
Knoll, G. F., Radiation Detection and Measurement, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1979.
 
This book provides extensive discussion of all types of radiation detection systems, including high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy systems.
 
In particular, Sec tion D deals exclusively with solid state detectors, and Section F is devoted to detector electronics and pulse processing.
 
Kuil, L A., "An Introduction to Ge(Li) and NaI Gamma Ray Detectors for Safeguards Applications," Argonne National Laboratory, ANL-AECA-103, 1974.
 
P. W. Nicholson, Nuclear Electronics, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1974.
 
This is an extensive treatise on electronics systems associated with high-resolution detectors.
 
Detailed descriptions are given of detector preamplifiers, pulse shaping, rate-related losses, pulse-height analysis, and spectral resolution.
 
Reilly, T. D., and J. L Parker, "Guide to Gamma-Ray Assay for Nuclear Material Accountability," Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, LA-5794-M, 1975.
 
This report briefly covers the principles involved in using gamma ray spectroscopy in the quantitative assay of SNM and attempts to describe both capabilities and limitations of gamma ray assay techniques. The report also includes a description of procedures for determining plutonium isotopic ratios.
 
Rogers, D. R., "Handbook of Nuclear Safeguards Measure ment Methods," Nuclear Regulatory Commission, NUREG/
CR-2078, 1983.
 
Chapter 5, "Passive Nondestructive Assay Methods,"
contains descriptions of many applications of high resolution gamma ray spectroscopy, as well as many references to original papers and reports.
 
Roney, W., and W. Seale, "Gamma-Ray Intensity Standards for Calibrating Ge(Li) Detectors for the Energy Range 200
1700 keV," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 171, p. 389, 1980.
 
Sher, R., and S. Untermeyer, The Detection of Fissionable Materials by Nondestructive Means, American Nuclear Society Monograph, 1980.
 
This relatively short book summarizes the principles of most nondestructive assay methods and briefly describes many typical applications, including those of high resolution gamma ray spectroscopy. Chapters 3 and 5 are of particular interest since they deal, respectively, with nuclear detection methods and passive NDA
techniques. The book also contains many references to original papers and reports.
 
5.9-6 K
 
VALUE/IMPACT STATEMENT
 
===1. PROPOSED ACTION===
1.1 Description
-"
Licensees authorized to possess at any one time more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material (SNM) are required in &sect; 70.51 of 10 CFR Part 70 to establish and maintain a system of control and account ability so that the standard error of any inventory difference ascertained as a result of a measured material balance meets established minimum standards. The selection and proper application of an adequate measurement method for each of the material forms in the fuel cycle are essential for the maintenance of these standards.
 
Many types of nondestructive assay (NDA) measurements on SNM can involve, or even require, a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system. The proposed action is to provide some general guidelines in the selection of such systems and to point out useful resources for more detailed information on their assembly, optimization, and use in material protection measurements.
 
1.2 Need for Proposed Action Regulatory Guide 5.9, which provides guidance in this area, has not been updated since 1974 and does not contain a list of pertinent information currently available in the literature.
 
1.3 Value/Impact of Proposed Action
1.3.1 NRC Operations The experience and improvements in detector technology that have occurred since the guide was issued will be made available for the regulatory process. Using these updated techniques should have no adverse impact.
 
1.3.2 Other Government Agencies Not applicable.
 
1.3.3 Industry Since industry is already applying the more recent detector technology discussed in the guide, updating these techniques should have no adverse impact.
 
No adverse impact on the public can be foreseen.
 
1.4 Decision on Proposed Action The guide should be revised to reflect improvements in techniques, to bring the guide into conformity with current practice, and to provide a list of pertinent information currently available.
 
===2. TECHNICAL APPROACH ===
Not applicable.
 
===3. PROCEDURAL APPROACH ===
Of the alternative procedures considered, revision of the existing regulatory guide was selected as the most advan tageous and cost effective.
 
4. STATUTORY CONSIDERATIONS
4.1 NRC Authority Authority for the proposed action is derived from the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended, and implemented through the Commission's regulations.
 
4.2 Need for NEPA Assessment The proposed action is not a major action that may significantly affect the quality of the human environment and does not require an environmental impact statement.
 
5. RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER EXISTING OR
PROPOSED REGULATIONS OR POLICIES
The proposed action is one of a series of revisions of existing regulatory guides on nondestructive assay tech niques.
 
6. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Regulatory Guide 5.9 should be revised to bring it up to date.
 
5.9-7
1.3.4 Public
 
UNITED STATES
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
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(Task SG 042-2), Revision 2, Guidelines for Germanium Spectroscopy Systems for Measurement of Special Nuclear Material
ML003740012
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Issue date: 12/31/1983
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Revision 2*

December 1983 U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

REGULATORY GUIDE

OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REGULATORY RESEARCH

REGULATORY GUIDE 5.9 (Task SG 042-2)

GUIDELINES FOR GERMANIUM SPECTROSCOPY SYSTEMS

FOR MEASUREMENT OF SPECIAL NUCLEAR MATERIAL

A. INTRODUCTION

Section 70.51, "Material Balance, Inventory, and Records Requirements," of 10 CFR Part 70, "Domestic Licensing of Special Nuclear Material," requires, in part, that licensees authorized to possess at any one time more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material establish and maintain a system of control and accountability so that the standard error (estimator) of any inventory difference, ascertained as a result of a measured material balance, meets established minimum standards. The selection and proper application of an adequate measurement method for each of the material forms in the fuel cycle is essential for the maintenance of these standards.

Many types of nondestructive assay (NDA) measurements on special nuclear material (SNM) can involve, or even

>

require, a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system.

This guide is intended both to provide some general guide lines acceptable to the NRC staff for the selection of such systems and to point out useful resources for more detailed information on their assembly, optimization, and use in material protection measurements.

Any guidance in this document related to information collection activities has been cleared under OMB Clearance No. 3150-0009.

B. DISCUSSION

1. BACKGROUND

Gamma ray spectroscopy systems are used for NDA of various special nuclear material forms encountered in the nuclear fuel cycle, both for quantitative determination of the SNM content and for the determination of radio nuclide abundances.

Applications of high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy have multiplied greatly in recent years. The samples encoun tered range from fresh fuel rods and reprocessing solutions to boxes and cans of uncharacterized waste material. Meas urement conditions also vary widely from controlled laboratory environments to the unpredictable plant environ ment that can be hostile to the measurement equipment and can often contribute serious background interferences to the spectral data. As a result, there is no single gamma ray assay system that can be effective in all cases. The system chosen for a particular NDA task must therefore be determined from careful consideration of all factors that may affect the measurement and of the requirements for the precision and accuracy of the assay.

The scope of this guide is limited to the consideration of high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy with lithium-drifted germanium, Ge(Li), or high-purity germanium, HPGe (also referred to as intrinsic germanium, IG), detectors. No discussion of thallium-activated sodium iodide, NaI(Tl), or lithium-drifted silicon, Si(Li),

gamma ray systems is presented. In addition, no discussion of specific NDA

applications of gamma ray spectroscopy is provided. The measurement procedures (including calibration), analysis methods, Inherent limitations, and overall precision and accuracy attainable are specific to each application and are therefore the subject of separate application guides. Guide lines for measurement control, calibration, and error analysis of NDA measurements are dealt with in detail in Regulatory Guide 5.53, "Qualification, Calibration, and Error Estimation Methods for Nondestructive Assay,"

which endorses ANSI N15.20-1975, "Guide to Calibrating Nondestructive Assay Systems."1 ANSI N15.20-1975 was reaffirmed in 1980.

ýX of the major commercial vendors of Ge(Li) and HPGe detectors and the associated electronics maintain up-to-date documentation on the specifications of currently available equipment, as well as a variety of useful and infor mative notes on applications. This literature is available The substantial number of channes in this revision has made it Impractical to Indicate the changes with lines in the margin.

1Covpies of this standard may be obtained from the American National Standards Institute, Inc., 1430 Broadway, New York, New York 10018.

USNRC REGULATORY GUIDES

Comments should be sent to the Secretary of the Commission.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555.

Regulatory Guides are Issued to describe and make available to the Attention: Docketing and Service Brancn.

public methods acceptable to the NRC staff of implementing specific parts of the Commission's regulations, to delineate tech- The guides are Issued In the following ten broad divisions:

niques used by the staff in evaluating specific problems or postu iated accidents or to provide guidance to applicant

s. Regulatory

1. Power Reactors

6. Products Guides are nof substitutes for regulations, and compliance with

2. Research and Test Reactors

7. Transportation them Is not required. Methods and solutions different from those set

3. Fuels and Materials Facilities S. Occupational Health out in the guides will be acceptable If they provide a basis for the

4. Environmental and Siting

9. Antitrust and Financial Review findings requisite to the issuance or continuance of a permit or

5. Materials and Plant Protection 10. General license by the Commission.

Copies of issued guides may be purchased at the current Government This guide was Issued after consideration of comments received from Printing Office price. A subscription service for future guides in spe the public. Comments and suggestions for Improvements in these cific divisions is available through the Government Printing Office.

guides are encouraged at all times, and guides will be revised, as Information on the subscription service and current GPO prices may appropriate, to accommodate comments and to reflect new informa- be obtained by writing the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, tion or experience.

Washington, D.C. 20555, Attention: Publications Sales Manager.

from the manufacturers upon request, and the potential customer may use this literature as a source of the most current information on the highest quality systems available.

Finally, the potential user ought to consult with those individuals currently active in the field of nondestructive assay of special nuclear material and seek their advice in the particular assay problem being considered.

2. BIBLIOGRAPHIC INFORMATION

An annotated bibliography is included in this regulatory guide to provide more detailed information on spectros copy systems and their use.

Elementary introductions to the concepts associated with the application of high-resolution gamma ray spectros copy to problems of nuclear material assay are available in Augustson and Reilly and in Kull. These works discuss the physical processes of gamma ray detection and impor tant instrumentation characteristics. More advanced dis cussion of gamma ray detectors and associated electronics may be found in Knoll and in Adams and Dams. A thorough treatise on the associated electronics is available in Nicholson.

In addition, extensive discussion of a variety of NDA tech niques and the implementation of some of these techniques with high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy may be found in Sher and Untermeyer, in Rogers, and in Reilly and Parker. Detailed descriptions of detector efficiency and energy calibration procedures are available in section D of Knoll and also in Hajnal and Klusek; in Hansen, McGeorge, and Fink; in Hansen et aL; and in Roney and Seale.

Relevant technical information beyond the introductory level, including nomenclature and definitions, is contained in three useful standards of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976, "Test Procedures for Amplifiers and Preamplifiers for Semi conductor Radiation Detectors for Ionizing Radiation," 2 ANSI/IEEE Std 325-1971, "Test Procedures for Germanium Gamma-Ray Detectors" 2 (reaffirmed in 1977), and ANSI/

IEEE Std 645-1977, "Test Procedures for Hifh-Purity Germanium Detectors for Ionizing Radiation,""

which supplements ANSI/IEEE Std 325-1971. These describe detailed techniques for defining and obtaining meaningful performance data for Ge(Li) and HPGe detectors and amplifiers.

/

3. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION

A block diagram of a typical high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system is shown in Figure 1. In such a system, the solid state Ge(Li) or HPGe detector converts some or all of the incident gamma ray energy into a proportional amount of electric charge, which can be analyzed by the subsequent electronics. The detector output is converted into an analog voltage signal by the preamplifier, which is may be obtained from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., 34S East 47th Street, New York, New York 10017.

an integral part of the detector package. The preamplifier signal is further amplified and shaped and is then converted into digital information that can be stored, displayed, and otherwise processed by the data reduction and analytical components of the system.

4. TYPES OF SYSTEMS

High-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy systems are distinguished primarily by the type (p-type or n-type) and the configuration (planar or coaxial) of detector used. For assay applications involving the measurement of low-energy gamma radiation (i.e., energies below approximately

200 keV), a thin planar HPGe or Ge(Li) crystal is most appropriate. A coaxial detector crystal with a larger volume is much better suited for higher energy gamma ray measure ments (i.e., for energies above approximately 120 keV).

The distinction between these two types of detectors is not sharp. For instance, there maý be some applications above

120 keV in which a planar detector would be useful to render the system less sensitive to interferences from ambient high-energy gamma radiation.

It should be noted that Ge(Li) detectors have no real advantage over HPGe detectors with comparable perform ance specifications. In addition, Ge(Li) detectors require constant liquid nitrogen (LN) cooling, even when not in operation. HPGe detectors are, of course, also operated at LN temperature, but they can be stored at room tempera ture. This is an advantage to potential users who may have extended plant shutdowns. It also prevents complete loss of a detector due to operator procedure error, which can happen with a Ge(Li) detector when Ll4 cooling is not continuously maintained. This added convenience and the greater ruggedness of the HPGe detectors make them especially attractive for in-plant NDA applications.

5. EQUIPMENT ACCEPTANCE PRACTICES

Equipment descriptions and instructional material covering operation, maintenance, and: servicing of all electronic components are supplied by the manufacturer for all individual modules or complete systems. Such descriptions should include complete and accurate sche matic diagrams for possible in-house equipment servicing.

Complete operational tests of system performance are to be made at the vendor's facility, and the original data are supplied to the user upon delivery of the equipment.

Extensive performance testing of all systems by the user is generally not necessary.3 However, qualitative verification of selected equipment performance specifications and detector resolution is recommended.

It is necessary to have calibration sources on hand to verify the operational capabilities of the system. The following radioactive sources (with appropriate activities)

3Although the quality control and presh.pment testing proce.

dures of the commercial vendors of detectors and associated elec.

onuic, h~ave improved and are quite dependable, some user verifica.

tion of the specifications claimed by the manufacturer Is strongly recommended.

5.9-2 K

I

I

I

\\

I

I

I

I

Uquld I

Nitrogen High Dewa Voltage I

(Cooling)

Supply Spectrum f

.Stabilization I

Spectroscopy I

Analog-to-Digital I

Detector Preamplifier Amplifier Conversion I

I

I

I.

I

,

I

II

Count I

Rate Scaler Data storage, display, and data reduction and analysis I

components I

I

I

FIGURE 1 A block diagram of a typical setup of a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system. The dashed boxes indicate which sets of modules are usually packaged as one component in commercially available systems. Liquid nitrogen cooling of the detector is required for proper operation of the system, but the field-effect transistor (FET) in the preamplifier input stage may or may not be cooled, depending upon the type of detector used and the energy resolution desired. A scaler is shown connected to the main amplifier, a common method of monitoring the total system count rate. For long-term data acquisi tion, spectrum stabilization is recommended, and the method is indicated here by a stabilizer module in communication with the analog-to-digital converter (ADC).

5.9-3

will provide sufficient counting rates to verify the energy resolution specifications of the manufacturer and to carry out any other performance tests desired by the user:

60Co 10-30 pCi, Gamma ray energies: 1173,1332 keV

5 7 CO

1-10 j0i, Gamma ray energies: 14, 122, 136 keV

C. REGULATORY POSITION

Ge(Li) or HPGe gamma ray spectroscopy data acquisi tion systems meeting the general guidelines outlined briefly below are considered more than adequate for use in SNM

assay requiring resolution better than that obtainable with Na! detectors. The potential user should select the detector and associated electronics that meet the needs of the partic ular assay task required, with careful consideration of all factors that could affect the quality of the assay.

1. DETECTOR PERFORMANCE

Excellent performance, routinely available in coaxial germanium detectors, may be represented by energy resolutions (FWHM) 4 of approximately 1.7 keV at 1332 keV

(60 Co) and approximately 0.7 keV at 122 keV (5 Co) for detectors with efficiencies up to 20 percent.5 The full width at 0.1 maximum (FWTM) for such detectors is typically up to 1.9 times the FWHM. For these higher efficiency detec tors, "peak-to-Compton ratios" are usually quoted in the range of 25 to 40. These ratios are strong functions of resolution, efficiency, and exact detector crystal geometry, and no typical values can be given without knowledge of all of these parameters. Coaxial detectors with this kind of resolution will usually have cooled field-effect transistor (FET) preamplifiers and an energy-rate capability of approximately 50,000 MeV/sec. 6 Room temperature pre amplifiers have somewhat worse resolution but have rate capabilities on the order of 150,000 MeV/sec.

The resolution of planar detectors is a stronger function of the crystal size and shape than that of coaxial detectors, so representative resolutions cannot be given over a range of sizes. As an example from the middle of the range of sizes usually offered, an excellent 2 cm 3 planar detector (le.,

2 cm 2 front face area x 1 cm thick) would have a resolution of approximately 0.5 keV at 122 keV (5 7Co) and 0.21 keV

at 5.9 keV (Mn X-ray from SaFe decay). Planar detectors

4The full width of the gamma ray photopeak at half of its maximum height (FWHM) is defined in ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976.

SThe full-energy peak efficiency (in percent) is defined relative to the full-energy peak efficiency of a 3-in. J.n. NaI(TI) scintilla tion detector for 1332-keV gamma rays v Co) at a source-to.

detector distance of 25 cm. The detailed procedures for determining the efficiency in accordance with this definition are presented in Section 5.2 of ANSI/IEEE Std 301-1976.

6Counting rate capabilities, expressed In MSV/sec, denote the maximum charge-to-voltay. conversion rate of which the pre amplifier Is capable. For " Co, a SO,000-MeV/sec rate capability corresponds to a pulse iunting rate limitation of approximately

80,000 counts/se

c. For Co a

000-MeV/sec rate capability also corresponds to a pulse rate limitation of approximately 80,000

counts/sec. Of course, nuclear material assays should be performed at count rates well below these limiting values in order to minimize rate-related losses from pulse pileup and dead time.

will always have LN-cooled FET preamplifiers in order to achieve the excellent resolution of these systems. The preamplifier feedback loop may be either pulsed optical or resistive,7 and the system will have fairly modest rate capabilities in the range of 5000 MeV/sec. 6 It is important to decouple the detector from noisy mechanical environ ments to avoid microphonic pickup.

2. ELECTRONICS PERFORMANCE

For ease of use, maintenance, and replacement of the components in a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system, the electronic components should be standard nuclear instrument modules (NIM) (Ref. 1), with the possible exception of the pulse-height analysis (Le., multi channel analyzer) components. Pulse signals should be transmitted from module to module in shielded coaxial cable to minimize the effects of possible electronic noise from nearby machinery at the measurement site. The cables should have a characteristic impedance that matches the terminations used in the NIM modules (generally 93 ohms).

The system power supplies (detector high voltage, preamplifier, and NIM bin) should be capable of operating the system within the operating specifications when supplied with 115 volts (+10 percent) at 50 to 65 hertz (at constant room temperature). The power supplied for the detection system should be stabilized against voltage shifts in order to maintain resolution. The output voltage of the detector bias supply is determined by the detector requirements; 5 kilo volts is sufficient for most applications.

The main amplifier, commonly referred to as the spectros copy amplifier, should have variable gain and pulse-shaping controls for maximum setup flexibility. Most high-quality amplifiers are equipped with baseline restoration and pole-zero cancellation circuits (Ref. 2), which greatly improve the resolution that can be achieved on a routine basis. Baseline restoration is essential for assay situations in which count rates in excess of several kilohertz are antici pated. Pulse pileup suppression is also a useful feature, if available; it may be found in some spectroscopy amplifiers and even in separate NIM modules designed for that purpose.

Electronic components should be obtained with state-of the-art linearity and temperature sensitivity. Maintenance of long-term gain stability may require the use of a spec trum stabilizer. Centroid variations of a stabilization peak of less than one channel in a 4096-channel spectrum are achievable with commercially available stabilizer modules.

Stabilization peaks can be provided either by a pulser or by a radioactive source. Generally, a radioactive source is preferred because it contributes less distortion to the gamma ray spectrum and has a stable (although decaying)

emission rate. Furthermore, stabilization peaks from natural sources may be obtained from existing peaks in the assay spectrum itself, which simplifies the assay

7Feedback methods for charge-sensithve preamplifiers are dis cussed thoroughly in Chapter 5 of Reference 2.

K\\

5.9-4

setup. Dead-time and pileup corrections may also be performed using a pulser or a separate radioactive source fixed to the detector. The latter method is preferred for the reasons stated above.

3. SYSTEM SELECTION AND USE

The detailed requirements and constraints of a particular measurement situation will cause wide variation in the optimum choice of systems, even within a fairly well-defined application. For example, a requirement for high through put may dictate higher efficiency detectors and highly automated data acquisition electronics. Anticipated inter ferences from uranium, thorium, or fission products may make the best possible system resolution the most impor tant consideration. Severe operating environments may make the use of digital stabilization highly desirable. Con straints of space and location could dictate an unusually small LN dewar with automatic filling capacity. The list of such considerations in a given situation can be long, and each situation should be considered carefully and indi vidually in order to achieve a system that can acquire the required measurement data.

Beyond the choice of data acquisition systems, many other factors influence the successful use of gamma ray spectroscopy in quantitative assay measurements. Some of these are:

a. Gamma Ray Signatures: The energies and intensities of the relevant gamma rays place fundamental restrictions on the sensitivity, precision, and accuracy of any assay. The range of gamma ray energies of interest also determines the type of gamma ray detector appropriate for optimum efficiency.

b.

Full-Energy Peak Area Determination:

The proce dure for extracting this fundamental information from the spectral data will be determined by the complexity of the gamma ray spectra as well as the intensity and complexity of the gamma ray background at energies near the peaks of interest.

c.

Gamma Ray Attenuation by the Samples and Sur rounding Materials: Corrections for this effect are essential for accurate assays. The importance of this correction will increase as the gamma ray energies of interest decrease and the absorptive power of the sample and surrounding mate rials increases.

All of this emphasizes that by far the most important factor in choosing an appropriate data acquisition system, in Implementing proper assay procedures, and in supervising the assay operations is a highly competent person, prefera bly experienced in gamma ray spectroscopy and its appli cation to assay measurements of special nuclear materials.

Such a person, with the assistance of the existing literature and of others in the gamma ray field, will be able to consid er a particular application in detail and choose an appro priate detector and electronics to create a data acquisition system that is well suited to the required assay task.

5.9-5

REFERENCES

1. L Costrell, "Standard Nuclear Instrument Modules,"

U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, TID.20893, Revi sion 3, 1969.

2. P. W. Nicholson, Nuclear Electronics, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1974.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Adams, F., and R. Dams, Applied Gamma-Ray Spectros copy, Pergamon Press, New York, 1970.

This work provides a comprehensive coverage of back ground material pertinent to the gamma ray spectros copist.

Considerable information is provided on both Nal and Ge detectors.

Augustson, R. H., and T. D. Reilly, "Fundamentals of Passive Nondestructive Assay of Fissionable Material," Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, LA-565 I-M, 1974.

This manual contains helpful introductory descriptions of NDA applications of gamma ray spectroscopy, as well as some discussion of gamma ray detection systems.

Hajnal, F., and C. Klusek, "Semi-Empirical Efficiency Equations for Ge(Li) Detectors," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 122, p. 559, 1974.

Hansen, J., J. McGeorge, and R. Fink, "Efficiency Calibra tion of Semiconductor Detectors in the X-Ray Region,"

Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 112, p. 239, 1973.

Hansen, J., et al., "Accurate Efficiency Calibration and Properties of Semiconductor Detectors for Low-Energy Photons," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 106, p. 365, 1973.

Knoll, G. F., Radiation Detection and Measurement, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1979.

This book provides extensive discussion of all types of radiation detection systems, including high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy systems.

In particular, Sec tion D deals exclusively with solid state detectors, and Section F is devoted to detector electronics and pulse processing.

Kuil, L A., "An Introduction to Ge(Li) and NaI Gamma Ray Detectors for Safeguards Applications," Argonne National Laboratory, ANL-AECA-103, 1974.

P. W. Nicholson, Nuclear Electronics, John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1974.

This is an extensive treatise on electronics systems associated with high-resolution detectors.

Detailed descriptions are given of detector preamplifiers, pulse shaping, rate-related losses, pulse-height analysis, and spectral resolution.

Reilly, T. D., and J. L Parker, "Guide to Gamma-Ray Assay for Nuclear Material Accountability," Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, LA-5794-M, 1975.

This report briefly covers the principles involved in using gamma ray spectroscopy in the quantitative assay of SNM and attempts to describe both capabilities and limitations of gamma ray assay techniques. The report also includes a description of procedures for determining plutonium isotopic ratios.

Rogers, D. R., "Handbook of Nuclear Safeguards Measure ment Methods," Nuclear Regulatory Commission, NUREG/

CR-2078, 1983.

Chapter 5, "Passive Nondestructive Assay Methods,"

contains descriptions of many applications of high resolution gamma ray spectroscopy, as well as many references to original papers and reports.

Roney, W., and W. Seale, "Gamma-Ray Intensity Standards for Calibrating Ge(Li) Detectors for the Energy Range 200

1700 keV," Nuclear Instruments and Methods, Vol. 171, p. 389, 1980.

Sher, R., and S. Untermeyer, The Detection of Fissionable Materials by Nondestructive Means, American Nuclear Society Monograph, 1980.

This relatively short book summarizes the principles of most nondestructive assay methods and briefly describes many typical applications, including those of high resolution gamma ray spectroscopy. Chapters 3 and 5 are of particular interest since they deal, respectively, with nuclear detection methods and passive NDA

techniques. The book also contains many references to original papers and reports.

5.9-6 K

VALUE/IMPACT STATEMENT

1. PROPOSED ACTION

1.1 Description

-"

Licensees authorized to possess at any one time more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material (SNM) are required in § 70.51 of 10 CFR Part 70 to establish and maintain a system of control and account ability so that the standard error of any inventory difference ascertained as a result of a measured material balance meets established minimum standards. The selection and proper application of an adequate measurement method for each of the material forms in the fuel cycle are essential for the maintenance of these standards.

Many types of nondestructive assay (NDA) measurements on SNM can involve, or even require, a high-resolution gamma ray spectroscopy system. The proposed action is to provide some general guidelines in the selection of such systems and to point out useful resources for more detailed information on their assembly, optimization, and use in material protection measurements.

1.2 Need for Proposed Action Regulatory Guide 5.9, which provides guidance in this area, has not been updated since 1974 and does not contain a list of pertinent information currently available in the literature.

1.3 Value/Impact of Proposed Action

1.3.1 NRC Operations The experience and improvements in detector technology that have occurred since the guide was issued will be made available for the regulatory process. Using these updated techniques should have no adverse impact.

1.3.2 Other Government Agencies Not applicable.

1.3.3 Industry Since industry is already applying the more recent detector technology discussed in the guide, updating these techniques should have no adverse impact.

No adverse impact on the public can be foreseen.

1.4 Decision on Proposed Action The guide should be revised to reflect improvements in techniques, to bring the guide into conformity with current practice, and to provide a list of pertinent information currently available.

2. TECHNICAL APPROACH

Not applicable.

3. PROCEDURAL APPROACH

Of the alternative procedures considered, revision of the existing regulatory guide was selected as the most advan tageous and cost effective.

4. STATUTORY CONSIDERATIONS

4.1 NRC Authority Authority for the proposed action is derived from the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, as amended, and implemented through the Commission's regulations.

4.2 Need for NEPA Assessment The proposed action is not a major action that may significantly affect the quality of the human environment and does not require an environmental impact statement.

5. RELATIONSHIP TO OTHER EXISTING OR

PROPOSED REGULATIONS OR POLICIES

The proposed action is one of a series of revisions of existing regulatory guides on nondestructive assay tech niques.

6. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS

Regulatory Guide 5.9 should be revised to bring it up to date.

5.9-7

1.3.4 Public

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