Alpha Ionization

From New IAC Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Alpha Particles ionization simulation using GEANT4

GEANT4 simulates the ionization of alpha particles in Ar/CO2 90/10 gas. Geant4 can simulate the ionization process for alpha particles. Unfortunately the value of the step function underestimates the number of delta electrons even after decreasing the step cut to 1 nm. Also,using GEANT4 overestimates the range of alpha particles in Ar/CO2 gas when compared to those that srim calculates File:Alpha range ArCo2.txt, the following table shows the maximum range of alpha particles that are emitted from the U-233, and the ranges calculated by srim.

Alpha Energy (MeV) G4 Range (cm) Srim Range (um)
1.0 0.56599 129.49
2.0 1.1467 255.91
3.0 1.9024 417.27
4.0 2.8012 612.45
5.0 3.8425 839.91

Based on the previous table, GEANT4 failed to calculate the expected alpha range for most alpha energies, and underestimated the number of alpha's delta electrons emitted through that range, but it is still useful tool to simulate the primary delta electrons when negative beta particles pass through a defined medium.

Calculating the number of the delta electrons without using GEANT4

There is another way to calculate the number of delta electrons without using GEANT4. It starts by calculating the average energy loss [math] \Delta E_a[/math] by the alpha particles and the average energy loss per unit length [math] {\zeta} [/math] in Ar/CO2 gas using the Bethe-Block equation. It then uses the the following equation:

[math] \lambda = \frac{ \Delta E - \Delta E_a}{\zeta} [/math]

to calculate the actual energy loss by ionization [math] \Delta E [/math], where [math] \lambda [/math] represents random landau number.

By dividing the energy loss by the minimum energy for producing a pair of ion/electron pair W, this equation yields the number of electrons emitted by ionization.

Srim can simulate the motion of an alpha particle in Ar/CO2 gas by allowing for the change in the stopping power per unit length. It can also show the ionization energy loss as shown in the following figure:

4.8MeV ionization ArCo2.jpeg

This figure shows the ionization energy loss of 999 alpha particles as they pass through Ar/CO2 gas. Integrating the area under the curve and dividing by (W*1000) will estimate the number of delta electrons produced by an alpha particle.

Bethe block formula calculates the average ionization energy loss as the following: [math]- \frac{dE}{dx} = \frac{4 \pi}{m_e c^2} \cdot \frac{nz^2}{\beta^2} \cdot \left(\frac{e^2}{4\pi\varepsilon_0}\right)^2 \cdot \left[\ln \left(\frac{2m_e c^2 \beta^2}{I \cdot (1-\beta^2)}\right) - \beta^2\right][/math]

for an electron of rest mass [math] mc^2 = 0.511 MeV [/math],

Primary number ionization events from beta particle as a function of beta particle energy using Garfield and GEANT4

GEANT4 can simulate the primary number of delta electrons for a negative beta particle penetrating ArCO2. Using TestEm10 example and choosing appropriate default cut, GEANT4 counts the same number of primary delta electrons for a 1.1 MeV negative beta particles, and determines the energy of the delta electrons energy and momentum depending on Moller or Bhabha's scattering depending on the value of the kinetic energy cut used.<ref name = "Urban">Urbán, L. (1998, 10 09). Geant4 physics reference manual. Retrieved from http: //geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/G4UsersDocuments/UsersGuides/PhysicsReferenceManual/html/node41.html </ref>


<References/>