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arxiv: 2605.14992 · v1 · pith:7WWBYDY3new · submitted 2026-05-14 · ⚛️ physics.optics · cond-mat.mes-hall

Hybrid Nanophotonic Scintillators for Enhanced X-ray Absorption, Emission, and Time Resolution

classification ⚛️ physics.optics cond-mat.mes-hall
keywords scintillatornanophotonicemissionenhancedlayerratescintillatorsstopping
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Scintillators convert ionizing radiation into visible photons, enabling applications from cosmic ray detection to medical imaging. Two independent strategies for improving scintillator performance via nanoscale patterning have recently been demonstrated: engineering material properties to enhance absorption of ionizing radiation and integrating nanophotonic structures to enhance the spontaneous emission rate ("nanophotonic scintillators"). Here, we propose a nanophotonic scintillator that simultaneously enhances both the initial energy conversion and the spontaneous emission rate, by periodically stacking a fast-emitting scintillator and a visible-light-transparent material with strong X-ray attenuation ("stopping layer") to form a one-dimensional (1D) photonic crystal (PhC) scintillator. Photoelectric absorption in the stopping layer increases the number of photoelectrons that deposit energy in neighboring scintillator layers and contribute to scintillation. At the same time, the spontaneous emission rate is enhanced by the nanophotonic structuring itself. We design a 1D PhC comprising an organic scintillator and indium tin oxide (ITO) as the stopping layer and numerically simulate the enhancement in scintillation yield and decay rate. The total detected light output is enhanced by up to a factor of 700 compared to a bulk organic scintillator of equal thickness. We further investigate a 1D PhC structure integrating inorganic and organic scintillators for time-of-flight positron emission tomography (TOF-PET): replacing the non-scintillating stopping layer with an inorganic scintillator further increases the light yield, and the coincidence time resolution (CTR) is enhanced up to 3.5 times compared to a bulk inorganic scintillator of equal thickness. Our work presents a unified approach to improve key scintillation parameters within a single nanophotonic structure.

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