DocumentCode :
37980
Title :
Range-Finding Sensor Degradation in Gamma Radiation Environments
Author :
Diggins, Zachary J. ; Mahadevan, Nagabhushan ; Herbison, Dan ; Karsai, Gabor ; Barth, Eric ; Reed, R.A. ; Schrimpf, R.D. ; Weller, Robert A. ; Alles, Michael L. ; Witulski, Arthur
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
Volume :
15
Issue :
3
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Mar-15
Firstpage :
1864
Lastpage :
1871
Abstract :
The effects of gamma radiation on common sensors used in robots intended for nuclear remediation scenarios are examined. Commercial rangefinders are chosen as an exemplar of the impact of gamma radiation on sensors and systems. This paper illustrates sensor radiation degradation not only in operational failure, but also in changes in the sensor transfer function. Three types of commercial range-finding sensors are considered [infrared (IR) triangulation using a position sensitive detector, sonar using time of flight, and laser rangefinder using triangulation and a CMOS camera]. Experimental results show significant changes in the IR sensor´s static sensitivity with dose, abrupt failure of the laser range finder at low dose, and degradation and abrupt failure for the sonar detector. The input-output relationship of the IR sensor showed further variation after a period of room-temperature annealing. Significant part-to-part variation in radiation response is shown for both the sonar and IR sensor. System level impacts due to sensor input-output relationship degradation and a technique to diagnose the degradation extendable to more complex sensor assemblies are presented.
Keywords :
CMOS image sensors; gamma-ray detection; infrared detectors; laser beam annealing; laser ranging; sonar detection; CMOS camera; IR sensor; IR triangulation; assembling; gamma radiation environment; infrared triangulation; laser rangefinder; nuclear remediation scenario; position sensitive detector; range-finding sensor degradation; robot; room-temperature annealing; sonar detector; temperature 293 K to 298 K; transfer function; Degradation; Robot sensing systems; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Sonar; Transfer functions; Total ionizing dose; cmos camera; gamma radiation; infrared rangefinder; robotic sensing; sonar; total ionizing dose;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Sensors Journal, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1530-437X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSEN.2014.2368139
Filename :
6954454
Link To Document :
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