Two women stand in a laboratory. The woman on the left holds a small glass cube in one hand and shines a UV light on it with the other hand, making the cube glow blue. The woman on the right points at the cube.

Organic glass scintillators: A Q&A with Sara Pozzi

The radiation detection material stands to improve nuclear security by clearly distinguishing radiation types from a safe distance.

Nuclear energy:
fission and fusion

Advancing nuclear energy
from discovery to deployment

  • Organic glass scintillators offer advantages in cost, manufacturing ease and radiation detection accuracy over plastic and liquid scintillators, according to a University of Michigan Engineering and Sandia National Laboratories study.
  • The material can help nuclear security teams distinguish neutrons from a fission source, like uranium or plutonium, from gamma rays emitted by medical isotopes, without opening or altering a package.
  • Prototyping, field tests and longevity testing will help move organic glass scintillators towards large-scale use for radiation detection.

As the demand for nuclear security solutions grows, distinguishing a benign medical isotope from a potential threat is critical. Organic glass scintillators can help meet the need for accurate, cost-effective radiation detectors.

In the past, nuclear security teams have faced trade-offs between the durability, accuracy and cost of radiation detection materials. Sara Pozzi, the Donald C. Graham Professor of Engineering at the University of Michigan Engineering, works with her research group to develop next-generation radiation detection systems that eliminate some of these trade-offs.

The U-M team, along with a collaborator at Sandia National Laboratories, synthesized recent findings in a paper published in Radiation Measurements. Below, Pozzi shares her knowledge on the advantages, drawbacks and applications of organic glass scintillators.

 Two women stand in a laboratory. The woman on the left holds a small glass cube in one hand and shines a UV light on it with the other hand, making the cube glow blue. The woman on the right points at the cube.
Erin Neely (left), a doctoral student of Applied Physics at the University of Michigan, and Sara Pozzi (right), the Donald C. Graham Professor of Engineering, shine a UV light on an organic glass scintillator cube. The radiation detection material can help nuclear security teams clearly distinguish neutrons and gamma rays from a safe distance. Credit: Daryl Marshke, University of Michigan.

What are scintillators needed for in the context of nuclear security?

If a suspicious package is intercepted at a port or border, a nuclear security team needs to be able to characterize the potential radioactive contents without opening the container or doing any destructive analysis.

It’s important to be able to use a radiation detector a safe distance from the source and reliably distinguish whether it is a fission material, like uranium or plutonium, or some other radioactive material that may be used for industry or medicine.

Scintillators are the materials within a detector that light up in response to radiation. Their properties influence pulse-shape discrimination, meaning how accurately it can tell between neutrons, indicating a fission material, and gamma-rays, indicating a medical or industrial material.

What advantage do organic glass scintillators offer over conventional liquid or plastic scintillators? 

A close up of a hand holding an approximately one-inch cube glowing blue from a UV flashlight held near the surface.
Organic glass scintillators offer advantages in cost, manufacturing ease and radiation detection accuracy over plastic and liquid scintillators, according to a University of Michigan Engineering and Sandia National Laboratories study. The material can be melted and cast into molds and hardened, making it easy to shape or reshape. Credit: Daryl Marshke, University of Michigan.

Cost is a major draw to organic glass scintillators. As the nuclear security field expands, there’s a demand for accurate, low-cost scintillators so that more detectors can be deployed.

Beyond cost, solid scintillators are preferred for field applications because liquid scintillators can leak from the device if it’s damaged. Of the two solid options, organic glass scintillators offer better pulse-shape discrimination than plastics.

Organic glass scintillators are also easy to work with in the lab using standard melt-cast methods. Our students cast the material into molds. We then put it in a controlled oven to cool back to a solid overnight. After taking the material out of the mold, just a few steps turn it into a detector.

A cool thing about organic glass scintillators is that if you drop it or it cracks for some reason, you can cast it again. This is much more difficult to do with plastics that need higher temperatures to reform.

How big are the organic glass scintillators and detectors your group has worked on recently?

For the imaging application we discuss in the paper, we casted organic glass scintillator bars that are about 5 centimeters tall. Several of these bars are arranged in a row within a handheld detector. There is no real limit to the size of an organic glass scintillator. You can change your mold to cast different sizes as needed.

How can additives in organic glass scintillators tailor detectors for specific uses?

If a moderator has been placed around uranium or plutonium in an attempt to hide the signal, the material still gives off thermal neutrons. Adding boron to an organic glass scintillator enables thermal neutron detection to uncover obstructed radioactive materials. 

A student of mine is currently working on a thesis on tin-loaded organic glasses. The heavier tin atom improves gamma sensitivity, helping detectors parse different sources of gamma rays.

 Four students sit and work at a long laboratory bench.
Pozzi’s research team works to develop next-generation radiation detection systems that eliminate some of the trade-offs between durability, accuracy and cost of radiation detection materials. Doctoral students Ethan Schneider (front left), Caryanne Wilson (front right), and Annamaria McHugh (back left) and Erin Neely (back right) work to prepare experiments.

Organic glass scintillators demonstrate a strong coincidence timing resolution. What does this mean for radiation detection?

Coincidence timing resolution has to do with the accuracy of neutron energy reconstruction. It’s measured by the time it takes for a particle to move from one detector bar to the next. If we can get really accurate information about how long that travel takes, we can accurately reconstruct the energy of the neutron.

How would you like to see organic glass scintillators progress over the next 10 years? 

The hope is that the pulse-shape discrimination of organic glass scintillators will continue to improve. As this is a newer material, we also don’t yet know how it will hold up over time. We are simulating aging by putting organic glass scintillators through heat treatments, but we will also monitor how they age naturally. 

The ultimate goal is large-scale deployment of organic glass scintillators, but in the meantime, robust prototyping and field testing will pave the way forward.

This research was supported in part by the Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration (DE-NA0003920).

Pozzi notes that this project was made possible by collaborations with Sandia National Laboratories, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Radiation Monitoring Devices, Inc.