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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A honeycomb solid target design

Koziorowski, J. 19 May 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Introduction Solid targets for PET and SPECT radionuclides are getting popular. For radiohalogens the limiting factor, beside the high cost of enriched target material is beam current due to poor heat conductivity of the target material(s). We have designed a honeycomb solid target which has advantages over the traditional circular hole de-sign: 1) Even distribution of target material, 2) it takes higher beam current, 3) less target material loss during distillation (1) and 4) no “creeping” (surface tension phenomena) of the target material during distillation. Material and Methods The target (see FIG. 1.) consists of 19 hexagonal 0.3 mm deep openings (see FIG. 2.) thus having 84% transparency/transmission, in a 24×2 mm platinum disk. There is a 10mm circular cavity on the reverse side giving a 200µm thickness of the platinum. The irradiations were performed on an IBA twin 18/18 Cyclon equipped with a Costis sold target system. The target material thickness was ~300mg/cm2 124TeO2 (> 99.9% I.E., Isoflex) with 5% w/w Al2O3 (99.99%, Sigma-Aldrich). The target was irradiated with 14.8MeV protons (18 MeV degraded by 500µm aluminium). Results and Conclusion The target was able to take beam current up to ~35 µA (higher BCs have not yet been investigated); our “traditional” target (10mm circular hole) has a limit of ~ 20 µA. This means that the effective yield is ~ 50 % higher with the honeycomb as compared with the “traditional” target design.
2

A honeycomb solid target design

Koziorowski, J. January 2015 (has links)
Introduction Solid targets for PET and SPECT radionuclides are getting popular. For radiohalogens the limiting factor, beside the high cost of enriched target material is beam current due to poor heat conductivity of the target material(s). We have designed a honeycomb solid target which has advantages over the traditional circular hole de-sign: 1) Even distribution of target material, 2) it takes higher beam current, 3) less target material loss during distillation (1) and 4) no “creeping” (surface tension phenomena) of the target material during distillation. Material and Methods The target (see FIG. 1.) consists of 19 hexagonal 0.3 mm deep openings (see FIG. 2.) thus having 84% transparency/transmission, in a 24×2 mm platinum disk. There is a 10mm circular cavity on the reverse side giving a 200µm thickness of the platinum. The irradiations were performed on an IBA twin 18/18 Cyclon equipped with a Costis sold target system. The target material thickness was ~300mg/cm2 124TeO2 (> 99.9% I.E., Isoflex) with 5% w/w Al2O3 (99.99%, Sigma-Aldrich). The target was irradiated with 14.8MeV protons (18 MeV degraded by 500µm aluminium). Results and Conclusion The target was able to take beam current up to ~35 µA (higher BCs have not yet been investigated); our “traditional” target (10mm circular hole) has a limit of ~ 20 µA. This means that the effective yield is ~ 50 % higher with the honeycomb as compared with the “traditional” target design.

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