Simple Thorium Linearity Check with Excel
Posted: 08 Dec 2019, 21:22
I know we have covered this before, but the many peaks all the way up to 2614 makes Thorium a good choice for calibrating and checking the linearity of probes, and it is also easily accessible.
There are a number of things that affect the linearity of a spectrum, PMT, divider, voltage and electronics, but the one you have most control over is the voltage, so to find the optimum voltage for a probe I made myself a simple spreadsheet (attached). Just run a Th spectrum at set voltages and plot the peaks in arbitrary units and repeat this for multiple voltages. The spreadsheet normalises the columns to KeV and plots the points on a chart, making it easy to see.
It doesn't need to be more complicated than this.
There are a number of things that affect the linearity of a spectrum, PMT, divider, voltage and electronics, but the one you have most control over is the voltage, so to find the optimum voltage for a probe I made myself a simple spreadsheet (attached). Just run a Th spectrum at set voltages and plot the peaks in arbitrary units and repeat this for multiple voltages. The spreadsheet normalises the columns to KeV and plots the points on a chart, making it easy to see.
It doesn't need to be more complicated than this.