First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators

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First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators. / Ghardi, EM; Scrimshire, Alex; Smith, Robin et al.
In: Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, Vol. 26, No. 7, 30.01.2024, p. 6138-6147.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Ghardi, EM, Scrimshire, A, Smith, R, Bingham, PA, Middleburgh, SC, Lee, WE & Rushton, MJD 2024, 'First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators', Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, vol. 26, no. 7, pp. 6138-6147. https://doi.org/10.1039/D3CP05576K

APA

Ghardi, EM., Scrimshire, A., Smith, R., Bingham, PA., Middleburgh, SC., Lee, WE., & Rushton, MJD. (2024). First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 26(7), 6138-6147. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1039/D3CP05576K

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

Ghardi EM, Scrimshire A, Smith R, Bingham PA, Middleburgh SC, Lee WE et al. First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics. 2024 Jan 30;26(7):6138-6147. Epub 2024 Jan 30. doi: 10.1039/D3CP05576K

Author

Ghardi, EM ; Scrimshire, Alex ; Smith, Robin et al. / First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators. In: Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics. 2024 ; Vol. 26, No. 7. pp. 6138-6147.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - First-principles study of lithium aluminosilicate glass scintillators

AU - Ghardi, EM

AU - Scrimshire, Alex

AU - Smith, Robin

AU - Bingham, PA

AU - Middleburgh, SC

AU - Lee, WE

AU - Rushton, MJD

PY - 2024/1/30

Y1 - 2024/1/30

N2 - Radiation sensors are an important enabling technology in several fields, such as medicine, scientific research, energy, defence, meteorology, and homeland security. Glass-based scintillators have been in use for more than 50 years and offer many benefits, including their ability to respond to different types of radiation, and to be readily formed into various shapes. There is, however, the prospect to develop new and improved glass scintillators, with low self-absorption, low refractive indices, and high radiative recombination rates. To investigate the factors limiting the improvement of glass scintillator properties, this work provides insight from atomic scale simulations of the cerium-doped lithium aluminosilicate (SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–Li2O–Ce2O3) glass scintillator system. Three glass compositions were studied using molecular dynamics and density functional theory to investigate the effect of the ratio Image ID:d3cp05576k-t1.gif (with RAl/M = [0.1, 0.8 and 1.2]) on the structural and electronic properties. For a ratio RAl/M > 1, it has been shown that glasses with increased polymerization allow for more effective incorporation of Ce3+ cations. The structural analysis also showed that the bond order of Al–O can be affected in the presence of a lithium-rich environment. Electronic density of states and Bader charge analysis indicate a decline in the population of localized trapping states with increasing RAl/M. This suggests a higher probability of radiative recombination which can increase the photon yield of these scintillators. These findings provide valuable guidance for optimizing Li-glasses in neutron detection systems by highlighting the intricate challenges.

AB - Radiation sensors are an important enabling technology in several fields, such as medicine, scientific research, energy, defence, meteorology, and homeland security. Glass-based scintillators have been in use for more than 50 years and offer many benefits, including their ability to respond to different types of radiation, and to be readily formed into various shapes. There is, however, the prospect to develop new and improved glass scintillators, with low self-absorption, low refractive indices, and high radiative recombination rates. To investigate the factors limiting the improvement of glass scintillator properties, this work provides insight from atomic scale simulations of the cerium-doped lithium aluminosilicate (SiO2–Al2O3–MgO–Li2O–Ce2O3) glass scintillator system. Three glass compositions were studied using molecular dynamics and density functional theory to investigate the effect of the ratio Image ID:d3cp05576k-t1.gif (with RAl/M = [0.1, 0.8 and 1.2]) on the structural and electronic properties. For a ratio RAl/M > 1, it has been shown that glasses with increased polymerization allow for more effective incorporation of Ce3+ cations. The structural analysis also showed that the bond order of Al–O can be affected in the presence of a lithium-rich environment. Electronic density of states and Bader charge analysis indicate a decline in the population of localized trapping states with increasing RAl/M. This suggests a higher probability of radiative recombination which can increase the photon yield of these scintillators. These findings provide valuable guidance for optimizing Li-glasses in neutron detection systems by highlighting the intricate challenges.

U2 - 10.1039/D3CP05576K

DO - 10.1039/D3CP05576K

M3 - Article

VL - 26

SP - 6138

EP - 6147

JO - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

JF - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

SN - 1463-9076

IS - 7

ER -