About

Log in?

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Anyone can log in and get personalized features such as favorites, tags and feeds.

Log in as DTU user Log in as non-DTU user No thanks

DTU Findit

Journal article

The dose dependency of the over-dispersion of quartz OSL single grain dose distributions

From

Radiation Physics, Center for Nuclear Technologies, Technical University of Denmark1

Center for Nuclear Technologies, Technical University of Denmark2

Aarhus University3

The use of single grain quartz OSL dating has become widespread over the past decade, particularly with application to samples likely to have been incompletely bleached before burial. By reducing the aliquot size to a single grain the probability of identifying the grain population most likely to have been well-bleached at deposition is maximised and thus the accuracy with which the equivalent dose can be determined is – at least in principle – improved.

However, analysis of single grain dose distributions requires knowledge of the dispersion of the well-bleached part of the dose distribution. This can be estimated by measurement of a suitable analogue, e.g. a well-bleached aeolian sample, but this requires such an analogue to be available, and in addition the assumptions that the sample is in fact a) well-bleached, and b) has a similar dose rate heterogeneity to the fossil deposit.

Finally, it is an implicit assumption in such analysis that any over-dispersion is not significantly dose dependent. In this study we have undertaken laboratory investigations of the dose dependency of over-dispersion using a well-bleached modern sample with an average measured dose of 36 ± 3 mGy. This sample was prepared as heated (750 °C for 1 h), bleached and untreated portions which were then given uniform gamma doses ranging from 100 mGy to 208 Gy.

We show that for these samples the relative laboratory over-dispersion is not constant as a function of dose and that the over-dispersion is smaller in heated samples. We also show that the dim grains in the distributions have a greater over-dispersion than the bright grains, implying that insensitive samples will have greater values of over-dispersion than sensitive samples.

Language: English
Year: 2012
Pages: 732-739
Proceedings: 13th International Conference on Luminescence and Electron Spin Resonance Dating - LED 2011
ISSN: 18790925 and 13504487
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.radmeas.2012.02.015
ORCIDs: Thomsen, Kristina Jørkov , Jain, Mayank and 0000-0001-5559-1862

DTU users get better search results including licensed content and discounts on order fees.

Log in as DTU user

Access

Analysis