Volume 174, 2014

Organic semiconducting single crystals as solid-state sensors for ionizing radiation

Abstract

So far, organic semiconductors have been mainly proposed as detectors for ionizing radiation in the indirect conversion approach, i.e. as scintillators, which convert ionizing radiation into visible photons, or as photodiodes, which detect visible photons coming from a scintillator and convert them into an electrical signal. The direct conversion of ionizing radiation into an electrical signal within the same device is a more effective process than indirect conversion, since it improves the signal-to-noise ratio and it reduces the device response time. We report here the use of Organic Semiconducting Single Crystals (OSSCs) as intrinsic direct ionizing radiation detectors, thanks to their stability, good transport properties and large interaction volume. Ionizing radiation X-ray detectors, based on low-cost solution-grown OSSCs, are here shown to operate at room temperature, providing a stable linear response with increasing dose rate in the ambient atmosphere and in high radiation environments.

Associated articles

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2014
Accepted
24 Jun 2014
First published
26 Jun 2014

Faraday Discuss., 2014,174, 219-234

Author version available

Organic semiconducting single crystals as solid-state sensors for ionizing radiation

B. Fraboni, A. Ciavatti, L. Basiricò and A. Fraleoni-Morgera, Faraday Discuss., 2014, 174, 219 DOI: 10.1039/C4FD00102H

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