Proton induced radiation damage studies on plastic scintillators for the Tile calorimeter of the atlas detector



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Harshna Masters Dissertation Final submission

3
 
Scintillation and Plastic Scintillators 
In order to understand how scintillators undergo radiation damage and how this 
in turn affects their performance, it is important to understand the fundamental 
mechanism behind scintillation. This Chapter focuses on explaining how 
scintillation occurs and how radiation affects the scintillation mechanism. The 
scintillators being investigated are then described.
3.1.
 
The scintillation mechanism 
Plastic scintillators primarily consist of organic fluors suspended in a polymer 
base. The polymer base that is employed generally contains some form of 
aromatic ring structure which gives rise to a delocalized π-electron structure 
within the molecule. When ionizing radiation impinges the scintillator, part of its 
energy may be absorbed by these delocalized π-electrons, resulting in molecular 
excitations. The absorption is typically exhibited in the visible and ultra -violet 
regions corresponding to excitation of the singlet π-electron state. The energy 
level diagram of a π-electron is shown in Figure 3-1. [1]
An excited π-electron may return to its ground state through several types of 
deactivation processes, with the preferred process being that which results in the 
shortest lifetime of the excited state. For excitations to higher states (S
2
, S
3
or 
T
2
, T
3
), these de-excite to lower states of the same multiplicity (S
1
or T
1
) by 
means of internal conversion within a short time span of the order of picoseconds.
This usually occurs when the energy levels of two excited states are close enough 
that their respective vibrational modes may overlap. Excitations which have 
additional vibrational energy, for example the S
11
-S
13
states, can also lose energy 
through vibrational relaxation, whereby heat is dissipated and thermal 
equilibrium is reached in the molecule. Both internal conversion and vibrational 
relaxation are non-radiative processes.


15 

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