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Chinese state-owned nuclear company claims breakthrough with radiation detection chip

CNNC said the proposed applications were ‘broad’, as customers can use the chip to monitor radiation doses in various scenarios

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Staff members work at a command centre for a nuclear power plant operated by CNNC in Fuqing, Fujian province, March 25, 2022.  Photo: Xinhua
Iris Dengin Shenzhen

A Chinese state-owned nuclear company said it has started mass production of the world’s first chip that can detect X-ray and gamma radiation, in the latest sign of China’s unrelenting efforts to seek semiconductor technology breakthroughs.

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The state-owned China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC) said in a statement on its official WeChat channel that the self-developed chip can measure dose rates of X- and gamma-ray radiation ranging from 100 nanoSievert per hour to 10 milliSievert per hour. The typical dose rate of radiation exposure when flying on a commercial aeroplane, for instance, is around 3,000 nanoSievert per hour, while that of exposure to natural background is around 60 to 200 nanoSievert per hour.

CNNC said the proposed applications were “broad”, as customers can use the chip to monitor radiation doses in various scenarios including nuclear-related workplaces, personnel and environmental settings, after adapting the circuit based on instructions in the manual.

It can also be integrated into smartphones and drones as a radiation sensor, which could then be used as smart devices with a radiation detection function, according to CNNC.

The core module of a small modular reactor (SMR) developed by CNNC. Photo: CCTV
The core module of a small modular reactor (SMR) developed by CNNC. Photo: CCTV

The chip’s sensitivity is comparable to a Geiger-Muller counter widely used in environmental measurement, despite its small size of 15mm by 15mm by 3mm, according to CNNC.

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