A solution-based technique for growing large-volume stilbene scintillators was developed in 2013; crystals up to diameters of 10 centimeters, or larger, have been grown while preserving excellent pulse shape discrimination (PSD) properties. The goal of this study is to evaluate the PSD capabilities of 5.08 by 5.08-cm stilbene crystals grown by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Inrad Optics when exposed to a 1000-to-1 gamma ray-neutron ratio and operating at a 100-kHz count rate. Results were compared to an equivalent EJ-309 liquid scintillation detector. 252 Cf neutron pulses were recorded in two experiments where 60 Co and 137 Cs sources created the high-gamma field. The high count rate created numerous double pulses that were cleaned using fractional and template approaches designed to remove double pulses while preserving neutron counts. PSD was performed at a threshold of 42 keVee (440-keV proton) for stilbene and 60 keVee (610-keV proton) for EJ-309 liquid. The lower threshold in stilbene resulted in a neutron intrinsic efficiency of approximately 14.5%, 10% higher than EJ-309 liquid, for bare 252 Cf and 13% for 252 Cf in the high-gamma field. Despite the lower threshold, the gamma misclassification rate in stilbene was approximately 3 × 10-6 , nearly a factor-of-five lower than what we found with the EJ-309 liquid.
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