Geiger-Muller Counter
Const:
Consists of a metal cylinder which acts as a cathode and is
about 1-2cm in dia.
It has an axial insulated wire (anode) and is capable of being
maintained at a high positive potential of the order of 8002500V.
this
assembly is placed in a tubular glass envelope containing a gas or mixture of gases which is easily ionisable.
The envelope is gas tight and is typically filled to a pressure
of 80mm of argon gas and 20mm of alcohol. Alcohol quenching gas, Argon-ionising gas
Tube contains a thin mica window which permits effective
passage of beta and gamma rad, but not of alpha rad.
Principle:
Gas is ionised in the counting tube. Migration
of ions takes place towards the app. Electrodes under the voltage gradient.
They acquire sufficient velocity, causing further ionisation
and give rise to an avalanche of electrons travelling towards the central anode.
As a result, ion multiplication spreads to a complete
sheath around the anode and the same pulse size is observed for each primary ionising event.
The process in fact produces a continuous discharge
which fills the whole vol. of the counter in less than a microsec.
Each discharge builds up to a constant pulse of 1-10V. This pulse amp.
Is sufficient to operate a ratemeter w/o using any amplifier.
Operation
Below the starting voltage , no counts are recorded. b/w the starting voltage and beginning of plateau the voltage
is too low to produce constant pulse size.
Beyond the plateau, the count rate inc. becoz of breakdown
and spurious discharges thr the tube.
Plateau is observed b/w 800-1400V. slope of the plateau-percentage of the count rate/volt. should not be more than 0.1% for a counter in satisfactory
cond.
The counter is placed inside a lead shield in order to minimise
the counts due to background.
Dead time
Positive ions are heavier and lower mobilities. Positive ions form a sheath around the anode causing the
counter to become insensitive to the entry of fresh ionising particles.(dead time).
External quenching circuit Reduces the dead time and increases the lifetime of the
counter.
Quenching
When a GEIGER-MULLER tube operates in Geiger region, the
secondary electrons increase the current pulse by further ionization of gas molecules.
The object of counter is to produce a single pulse due to entry of a
particle.
The tube should not then give any succeeding spurious pulses but
should recover as quickly as possible to be in the state to record the next entering particle.
Therefore, it is desirable to prohibit the production of spurious pulse
following the main required plus due to a single particle entry.
The process of prohibiting the undesirable secondary pulse is called
quenching. There are two method of quenching known as internal and external quenching.