• NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES
  • Vol. 46, Issue 11, 110505 (2023)
Lin TANG1、3, Shuang ZHOU1, Xianli LIAO1、2, Ze LIU1, and Bo LI1、*
Author Affiliations
  • 1College of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Chengdu University, Chengdu 610106, China
  • 2School of Nuclear Technology and Automation Engineering, Chengdu University of Technology, Chengdu 610059, China
  • 3School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore 639798, Singapore
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    DOI: 10.11889/j.0253-3219.2023.hjs.46.110505 Cite this Article
    Lin TANG, Shuang ZHOU, Xianli LIAO, Ze LIU, Bo LI. Truncated pulse height estimator based on an improved UNet model[J]. NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES, 2023, 46(11): 110505 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Background

    Generally, pulse truncation events caused by measurement systems often present challenges to pulse height analysis in the field of spectroscopy and radiometry, resulting in spectral distortion.

    Purpose

    This study aims to propose a composite neural network model for accurately estimating the heights of truncated pulses.

    Methods

    Firstly, a long and short-term memory (LSTM) network was embedded into the UNet structure to construct a composite neural network model (LSTM-UNet). Then, the model was trained for height estimation of truncated pulses output by silicon drift detectors using a simulated pulse dataset for which the pulse amplitude matrix superimposed with noise was taken as input signal while the output signal was a set of expanded pulse heights. Finally, the performance of the model using relative error indicators was evaluated by analyses of powder iron ore and powder rock samples.

    Results

    The average relative error of the UNet-LSTM model for pulse height estimation analysis on simulated pulse sequences is approximately 2.31%, which is 1.91% lower than the average relative error of traditional trapezoidal shaping algorithms. Verification results of the UNet-LSTM model on measured pulse sequences with different degrees of truncation show that the average relative error obtained during the height estimation of two samples and eight sets of offline pulse sequences is 2.36%.

    Conclusions

    The results reveal that the proposed model can accurately estimate truncated pulse heights.

    Lin TANG, Shuang ZHOU, Xianli LIAO, Ze LIU, Bo LI. Truncated pulse height estimator based on an improved UNet model[J]. NUCLEAR TECHNIQUES, 2023, 46(11): 110505
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