BORON-NITRIDE NANOTUBES AND VERSATILE DIELECTRICS FOR MEMS ELECTRONIC NOSE RADIATION DETECTOR

John V. Gats, Capt, USMC and Zishan Hameed, LT, USN (Joint Thesis)

As society's use of radiation-producing technologies increases, so does the need to create more effective and versatile radiation detectors. Low-cost, low-power, compact radiation detectors are applicable across an ever-growing range of fields and industries. MEMS and other printed fabrication technology can enable future mass production of versatile radiation sensors while maintaining reliability and low costs. By utilizing the electronic nose framework, combining an array of sensors to low-cost computing, we propose a new method of robust real-time radiation detection. This thesis explores both the fabrication process of MEMS sensors and the testing of various new materials designed to respond to gamma and neutron irradiation. Through three iterations of sensor creation at NPS and NASA, and subsequent testing of those sensors, a sensor combining carbon nanotubes and boron-nitride nanotubes successfully registered thermal neutron irradiation. A different sensor, combining MEMS capacitors with varying dielectric materials, did not register gamma irradiation during testing. The neutron detection results simply confirmed the presence of neutron irradiation, so future testing will be set up to measure specific response to energy and fluence of neutrons. Future testing for the capacitor sensor will involve a redesign of the MEMS chip and changing dielectric detection materials.

Point of Contact:

dgrbovic@nps.edu

Added:

Jul 06, 2019

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