Americium 241

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Americium 241 emits mainly alpha and gamma radiation. It has a half life of 432.2 years, by emitting alpha particles it turns into neptunium-237.

Average energy of most abundant emission
Gamma & X-rays - 0.05954 MeV (Dose Rate at 1 m distance (mSv/h*GBq) = 0.085)
Alpha - 5.49 MeV

Most of the radiation does not travel very far from the sample but at close range it is intense enought to affect electronic devices. Even small samples ionize the air around it, this effect is used in some smoke detectors. The radiation caused a 74HCT14 Schmitt trigger to oscillate at a couple of cm distance. Most likely this was because the air becoming ionized by the radiation and conducting a weak current from an output pin to an input pin.


Radiation detection with a CCD chip

Monochrome CCD sensor

The reccomended method for detection of radiation from Am-241 is a ZnS scintillation counter but a bare CD chip works quite well.

This video shows how the radiation affects a CCD imaging chip covered with a glass plate. Since the glass will stop all th alpha radiation only the gamma radiation hits the CCD surface. Hot pixels show up at random moments. This would be suitable as a base for generating true random numbers.

Fluorescence of phosphor

30s, f/1.4, ISO 1600
300s, f/1.4, ISO 1600
Filtered by 0.015 mm aluminium foil

The radiation is capable of exiting phosphors found inside low energy light bulbs. The phosohor light up very dimly with a red colour. It is almost impossible to see with the naked eye. The eye is not capable of determining the colour but a long exposure photograph shows the colour well.

The material that is exited by the radiation is most likely europium-doped yttrium trioxide (Y2O3:Eu) with an emission band at 612 nm. Almost 10% of the radiation passes through the aluminium foil.