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Lutz, S.S.; Ashford, C.B.; Flournoy, J.M.; Franks, L.A.; Lyons, P.B.
EG and G, Inc., Goleta, CA (USA); Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)1983
EG and G, Inc., Goleta, CA (USA); Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)1983
AbstractAbstract
[en] Heating organic liquid scintillator solutions has proven to be an efficient way to improve the time response in some cases. Higher temperatures increase the rates of diffusion-controlled energy transfer processes in dilute solutions and in solutions with relatively high viscosity at room temperature. Under these conditions both the excitation rate and the rate of intermolecular quenching, including concentration-quenching, become faster at higher temperatures. Except for specific concentration-quenching effects, little temperature dependence of the scintillator pulse parameters was observed in the more concentrated or in the less viscous systems
Secondary Subject
Source
1983; 14 p; Advances in scintillator counting conference; Banff, Alberta (Canada); 15-18 May 1983; CONF-830565--3; Available from NTIS, PC A02/MF A01 as DE83012400
Record Type
Report
Literature Type
Conference; Numerical Data
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