During the last three decades, passive dosimeters such as CaSO4:Dy, LiF or α-Al2O3:C have been used by numerous luminescence dating groups for measuring environmental (gamma and cosmic) dose rates in the field (e.g., Mejdahl, 1970, 1978; Bailiff, 1982; Valladas, 1982; Kalchgruber and Wagner, 2006; Burbidge and Duller, 2003; Richter
Our contribution aims at presenting a straight forward and easy to apply procedure to determine the environmental
Aluminium oxide (α-Al2O3:C; Akselrod
We use α-Al2O3:C chips produced by
Our chosen container design for depositing the chips in the field considers the demand for small sized housing to limit damages to the site; while at the same time ensuring a full attenuation of ‘natural’ β-particles by the container wall. Taking into account the Monte-Carlo calculations done by Aznar
Fig. 1
Photos of the α-Al2O3:C field equipment. Shown are the homemade bleaching unit (left inset) equipped with a high power blue LED, the chip container (field dosimeter tube), the sample carriers used for luminescence measurements and α-Al2O3:C chips.

Since the container walls absorb a part of the energy carried by
Composition (in mass %) and densities of the three sediments used for determining the fraction of dose absorbed by the chips, relative to the infinite matrix dose values. Sand: sand sediment; CC: carbonated sediment rich in clay; DK: sediment rich in organic matter. Carbonated sediment rich in clay; Sediment rich in organic matterSediment Density(g cm–3) Chemical composition Sand 1.8 SiO2(100%) CC 1.8 O (52.91%), Si (27.71%), Al (8.81%), Fe (7.00%), K (1.55%), Na (0.20%), Mg (0.46%), P (0.11%), S (0.05%), Cl (0.001%), Ca (0.448%), Ti (0.61%), Mn (0.10%) DK 1.6 O (38.30%), C (29.00%), Ca (9.70%), Si (5.40%), Cl (4.10%), P (3.30%), Mg (2.20%), K (1.90%), N (1.20%), F (0.50%), Na (1.90%), Al (1.00%), S (0.70%), Ti (0.10%), Fe (0.70%)
Ratios of the dose (D) absorbed in the Al2O3:C chips to the infinite matrix dose (Dmatrix) for the three sediments: Sand, CC and DK. For calculations, the U- and Th-series were at secular equilibrium. Carbonated sediment rich in clay; Sediment rich in organic matterSediment Series D/Dmatrix SE (D/Dmatrix) Mean SE(Mean) Sand U-series 0.938 0.061 0.931 0.052 Th-series 0.933 0.056 40K 0.921 0.040 CC U-series 0.921 0.071 0.938 0.041 Th-series 0.951 0.032 40K 0.940 0.021 DK U-series 0.938 0.040 0.939 0.041 Th-series 0.928 0.045 40K 0.951 0.038
The results indicate that, on average, the chips receive a dose which represents 93–94% of the infinite matrix dose (cf. also Martin, 2015).
Even if α-Al2O3:C dosimeters are fully reset in the laboratory, they are sufficiently sensitive to accumulate a significant signal during travel and need to be reset again in the field. Instead of using a conventional heating system such as a gas torch which requires access to gas cans, we took advantage of the high sensitivity of α-Al2O3:C to light to develop a “bleaching box” (inset Fig. 1, technical drawing Fig. S2). The box houses a blue LED (
Luminescence measurements were performed on a Freiberg Instruments
Fig. 2
Typical green stimulated OSL shine-down curve recorded at 70°C with a green stimulation power density of 50 mW cm–2. Before measurement, the chip was heated to 350°C for 10 min and afterwards irradiated for 4 s (ca. 816 μGy) under the closed source. The curve shows a slow decay of the signal, reaching a stable background of ca. 40,000 cts s–1 after ca. 200 s. In contrast, the inset shows a GSL background of the equipment without sample carrier of ca. 6,000 cts s–1 (green curve) and a PMT background (no stimulation) of ca. 100 cts s–1. Background measurement temperature: 70°C.

For the measurements, α-Al2O3:C chips were placed on homemade stainless-steel cups with a circular cavity in their centre (diameter 5.2 mm, depth of 0.2 mm; cf. Fig. 1). This modification holds the chips in the centre of a cup; it also improves the reproducibility of the measurements since the relative positioning of the chips below the irradiation source remains constant. Before the measurements, the sample carriers were heated to 450°C for 10 min in air. The α-Al2O3:C chips were reset at 900°C for 10 min. This pre-procedure applies to all experiments presented below if not stated otherwise.
Fig. 2 shows a typical green stimulated (GSL) shine-down curve of an α-Al2O3:C chip previously heated to 350°C and irradiated for 4 s under the closed β-source (ca. 816 μGy; value based on the calibration shown below). The stimulation power density was set to 50 mW cm–2; measurement temperature 70°C (2 K s–1). The luminescence signal decreases slowly and reaches a background of
Fig. 3
GSL and TL curves recorded during the reproducibility test. The plot order follows the sequence listed in Table 3 (steps 2,4,5,6). Each plot contains 50 curves. All curves were recorded on one particular sample carrier and α-Al2O3:C chip. The first TL curve (A, red curve) shows that the chip received a small dose after its resetting in an external furnace at 900°C. All particular curves are overlapping, and the signals are highly reproducible.

Sequence used for determining an accumulated dose in an α-Al2O3:C chip. The LEDs power was set to 50 mW cm–2 and the regenerated dose was 816 μGy. For the three OSL signals, the integration limits were between 0–10 s (0–500 mJ cm–2). GSL = green stimulated luminescence All GSL steps include a temperature stabilization phase of 20 s, the heating rate was set to 2 K/s# Treatment Observation 1 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 Natural signal 2 TL to 300°C (5 K/s) 3 Irradiation (closed ß-source for 4 s, 4 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 Regenerated signal 5 TL to 300°C (5 K/s) 6 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 Background signal
The recommended measurement sequence for dose recovery is listed in Table 3 and consists of only six steps. The sequence takes advantage of the fact that the OSL signal originates predominantly from the peak at 180°C (at
The OSL signals are integrated over the entire 10 s. The background signal is subtracted from the ‘natural’ and reference signals. The recorded TL curves provide a crosscheck only and are not used for data analysis. Assuming a linear dose response, the absorbed dose is determined by using a simple ratio of measured signals and known reference dose.
To test the reliability of the defined measurement protocol (Table 3) and the measurement system, we conducted a reproducibility test. One aliquot (sample carrier and α-Al2O3:C chip) was measured 50 times using the sequence in Table 3. The chip was not irradiated before the measurement. Fig. 3 (A to D) shows the obtained curves of this experiment in the order the curves have been recorded.
Except for the first TL curve (Fig. 3A, red curve, dose received between reset and first measurement), all subsequent curves (TL and GSL) overlap, indicating a high system reproducibility. The dose sensitivity was found to be in the order of
Fig. 4 provides the histogram of the reproducibility test. Amongst the cycle, the material does not suffer from sensitivity changes (cv = 0.2%), justifying the defined simple protocol for routine measurements. This data also indicates that the measurement system is reliable and the use of our modified cups allows for reproducible measurements. Furthermore, following these observations, and considering that the OSL signal of α-Al2O3:C increases linearly with up to, at least, 1 Gy (Akselrod
Fig. 4
Stability of the GSL emission over a series of 50 cycles consisting each of a thermal resetting, irradiation for 4 s (ca. 816 μGy), GSL measurement at 70°C, a second resetting and a GSL background measurement. Results are summarised in a histogram. The intensity varies by only 0.2% (cv) reflecting a high system reproducibility.

The high sensitivity of α-Al2O3:C requires special consideration during measurement and data analysis. In a
As a result, the sample receives the intended dose (pause beneath the irradiation source) and an additional dose (‘dose uptake’) during the transport in the chamber. The time of the sample transport likely varies from reader to reader. While these effects are small for conventional irradiation with an open shutter, the sample experiences similar dose rates during irradiation under the closed source and during transport in the chamber. Given further the dose sensitivity of α-Al2O3:C, and the required short irradiation times even under a closed shutter, the accumulated dose during the sample transport cannot be ignored. To estimate the ‘dose uptake’ during the sample transport, steps 3–6 (Table 3) were repeated for a chip with increasing irradiation times under the closed source to obtain a dose response. The sequence was repeated five times for the same chip, 12 chips were measured in total.
Fig. S7 (A–C, supplement) shows the obtained GSL and TL curves for one aliquot. The clean out TL curves (Fig. S7B) show a linear growth of the TL signal and with this the luminescence signal of the chip. The background curves (Fig. S7C) further proves that the chosen clean out (TL to 300°C) is sufficient to fully remove the induced luminescence signal on our system.
Fig. 5 shows the corresponding linear dose response curve for the five repetitions for one aliquot. Plotted are signals versus intended irradiation times. An intended dose of 0 s results in a significant luminescence signal. To correct for this dose uptake, the curve can be extrapolated to its intercept with the time axis at 2.61 ± 0.07 s. In other words, a pause of 0 s under the closed irradiation source, induces an equivalent dose of
Fig. 5
Typical dose response curve for determining the irradiation time correction. Shown is the mean for one aliquot with five repetitions each. The red numbers in brackets indicate the effective irradiation time after correction.

Routine measurements usually require the analysis of a vast number of chips (each container contains 3 chips). The
Fig. 6 shows the results of the irradiation cross-talk estimation. The simplified drawing of the sample carousel in the
Fig. 6
Results of the irradiation cross-talk estimation. The round circle represents the sample carousel with its sample positions. The result for each position is the mean of three measurements, the colours code the equivalent radiation cross-talk in seconds. The inset within the circle shows the individually obtained results for each position. For the irradiation cross-talk correction, the fitted polynomial function (red line) was used. For details see main text.

To obtain a dose value from the measured OSL signal the irradiation source must be calibrated for Al2O3:C. The
The resulting dose per second is about 180 times higher than the dose a dosimeter typically accumulates in a year when it is buried in sediment. To reduce the difference between the accumulated natural dose and the dose delivered by the artificial source, dosimeters were placed under the source, while the shutter of the source remained closed. The chip is then irradiated by a mixture of high energy electrons and Bremsstrahlung emission due to the interaction of the β-particles with the material of the shutter (1 mm stainless steel).
To calibrate the β-source α-Al2O3:C chips were exposed to a cubic block (1.2 × 1.2 × 1.2 m) of well characterized bricks (see Richter The difference to the results reported by Richter
In contrast to instantaneous in situ
Fig. 7
Dose values in ascending order, as measured during the irradiation cross-talk estimation (upper plot) and the corresponding cumulative relative standard deviation (RSD, lower plot). Each circle shows the mean for three measurements similar to the values presented in Fig. 6, but in ascending order. The dashed red line indicates the value at which the RSD becomes positive. The black horizontal lines (dashed, solid) indicate the here defined minimum detection level and minimum determination level. For further details see main text.

This value is comparable to the value of 5 μGy reported by McKeever
A series of
analyse_Al2O3C_ITC() to estimate the irradiation time correction value, analyse_Al2O3C_CrossTalk() determines the reader specific irradiation cross-talk and finally, the function analyse_Al2O3C_Measurement() can be used to routinely analyse α-Al2O3:C chip measurements.
The three separate functions allow for flexible workflows. Typically values for the irradiation time correction and the cross-talk are determined once and are only remeasured from time to time. Therefore, the output of the first two functions,
The developed procedure was tested on independent reference sites. Therefore, we stored twelve α-Al2O3:C chips in four tubes (three each) in four independently analysed references sites (LMP, C341, C347 and PEP) close to Clermont-Ferrand (France). Miallier
Fig. 8 shows the obtained
Fig. 8
Gamma-dose rates obtained in this study compared to the values published by Miallier et al. 2009 for four (natural) reference sites. Error bars show 1σ uncertainties. The solid line indicates unity, the dashed lines deviation by 10% from unity. For three out of the four sites the

The full measurement procedure and data analysis was finally applied on dosimeters buried for 258 days in an archaeological site of Sierra de Atapuerca (Spain, Aguirre and Carbonell, 2001; local site: Gran Dolina). Upon arrival, the dosimeters (63 chips, 21 containers, including travel dosimeters, each chips is considered as independent dosimeter) were first stored for a few days in a low-level background lead container. One dosimeter from each of the 21 containers was measured initially. The procedure was then repeated twice more with the second and third dosimeters from each tube.
Irradiation time correction and cross-talk correction values were taken from the measurements described above. The full details of the data analysis, including
Fig. 9
Coefficient of variation (A) and TL peak shift vs. De (B) for the analysed field dosimeters (n = 63). Please note that in contrast to Section 5 – Application example, De values are given in s instead of Gy, i.e. Cv is not the same. The left plot (A) shows the inter-aliquot scatter (cv up to ca. 18%) for each analysed sample (n = 21). Each circle represents three chips from one sample. Circles with a red coloured frame highlight aliquots for which a significant TL peak shift (cf. inset) was observed. However, the right plot (B, each circle one aliquot, n = 63) shows no correlation between the peak shift and the obtained De. For further details see main text.

For the final estimation of the environmental
Our contribution presents a comprehensive system and workflow to estimate the environmental
We showed that the high sensitivity of the dosimeters requires an irradiation time correction of 2.6 s (
It should be further mentioned that there is no reason to believe that an irradiation time correction is only needed for α-Al2O3:C chip measurements. If the dose rate in vicinity of the source is similar to the dose rate used during irradiation, typical for irradiations using Bremsstrahlung (closed shutter), such measurements may also benefit from the irradiation time correction reported above to avoid systematic errors.
Our procedure is tailored to suite the capabilities of a
We presented an easy to use system and workflow, allowing for environmental dosimetric measurements. The system can be applied to geological and archaeological sites if the situation allows storage of the used dosimeter tubes over a couple of months (depending on the environmental dose rate). In the presented procedure we used three chips per container and only one container per sampling position. This approach is sufficient for profiles with many sampling positions. However, with regard to the observed inter-aliquot scatter it might be useful to deposit more than one field container at a location, to gain a higher precision, if needed. Furthermore, we summarise:
Our system consists of a Duralumin tube accommodating three α-Al2O3:C chips (5 mm in diameter, 1 mm thick each, Monte-Carlo simulations using residual signals are reset in the field with a homemade bleaching box, the α-Al2O3:C chips are measured with a we revealed the need for a correction of the irradiation time by our experiments showed the high reproducibility of the measurement system and the low cumulative dose effects when 40 cups are loaded at the same time in the device (< 16 μGy), the minimum (meaningful) dose that can be determined was estimated at the dose of each chip was finally analysed using customised our data processing is tailored to a
We finally argued that any change in the system geometry or setting (including firmware updates) might require a re-evaluation of the values used for correcting the irradiation time and of estimating the irradiation cross-talk. Future work will test the hypothesis whether the inter-aliquot scatter is caused by cosmic-rays.
Supplementary materials, containing: (1) additional Figs. S1–S9, (2) additional Table S1, (3) application – Sierra de Atapuerca (Spain), site: Gran Dolina – full data analysis, are available online at
Fig. 1

Fig. 2

Fig. 3

Fig. 4

Fig. 5

Fig. 6

Fig. 7

Fig. 8

Fig. 9

Ratios of the dose (D) absorbed in the Al2O3:C chips to the infinite matrix dose (Dmatrix) for the three sediments: Sand, CC and DK. For calculations, the U- and Th-series were at secular equilibrium.
Sediment | Series | D/Dmatrix | SE (D/Dmatrix) | Mean | SE(Mean) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sand | U-series | 0.938 | 0.061 | 0.931 | 0.052 |
Th-series | 0.933 | 0.056 | |||
40K | 0.921 | 0.040 | |||
CC Carbonated sediment rich in clay; | U-series | 0.921 | 0.071 | 0.938 | 0.041 |
Th-series | 0.951 | 0.032 | |||
40K | 0.940 | 0.021 | |||
DK Sediment rich in organic matter | U-series | 0.938 | 0.040 | 0.939 | 0.041 |
Th-series | 0.928 | 0.045 | |||
40K | 0.951 | 0.038 |
Composition (in mass %) and densities of the three sediments used for determining the fraction of dose absorbed by the chips, relative to the infinite matrix dose values. Sand: sand sediment; CC: carbonated sediment rich in clay; DK: sediment rich in organic matter.
Sediment | Density(g cm–3) | Chemical composition |
---|---|---|
Sand | 1.8 | SiO2(100%) |
CC Carbonated sediment rich in clay; | 1.8 | O (52.91%), Si (27.71%), Al (8.81%), Fe (7.00%), K (1.55%), Na (0.20%), Mg (0.46%), P (0.11%), S (0.05%), Cl (0.001%), Ca (0.448%), Ti (0.61%), Mn (0.10%) |
DK Sediment rich in organic matter | 1.6 | O (38.30%), C (29.00%), Ca (9.70%), Si (5.40%), Cl (4.10%), P (3.30%), Mg (2.20%), K (1.90%), N (1.20%), F (0.50%), Na (1.90%), Al (1.00%), S (0.70%), Ti (0.10%), Fe (0.70%) |
Sequence used for determining an accumulated dose in an α-Al2O3:C chip. The LEDs power was set to 50 mW cm–2 and the regenerated dose was 816 μGy. For the three OSL signals, the integration limits were between 0–10 s (0–500 mJ cm–2).
# Treatment | Observation |
---|---|
1 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 | Natural signal |
2 TL to 300°C (5 K/s) | |
3 Irradiation (closed ß-source for 4 s, | |
4 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 | Regenerated signal |
5 TL to 300°C (5 K/s) | |
6 GSL@70°C for 10 s with 50 mW cm–2 | Background signal |