This application claims priority under 35 USC §119 to German Application Number 20 2006 018 938.6, filed Dec. 13, 2006, and to European Application Number 07 018 683.8, filed Sep. 24, 2007, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a hand-held metal detector for checking persons with a ring, rod, or disk-shaped probe section serving for housing a metal detection probe designed as a detector coil, followed by a shaft serving as a handle that holds display and operating elements as well as metal detection electronics.
Such hand-held metal detectors are known per se and are available in a multitude of designs. As an example, reference can be made to DE 20 2004 006 336 U1. Hand-held metal detectors of the type referred to above are conventionally used to scan people at airports, for example. These metal detectors make it possible to locate metallic objects carried by travelers, and of special interest are those that may be used for threatening people and/or are suitable for manipulating certain installations. Apart from dangerous firearms, knives, and explosive objects that may be detected in this manner, danger may also come from radioactive substances that can only be detected by a radiation detection probe. However, excluding this danger usually requires subjecting people to an additional scan by means of a radiation detector for ionizing radiation held close to the body of the person to be checked because the radioactive radiation often has only a low intensity and/or a short range. This additional step in the process, however, is a nuisance for the travelers as well as for the security personnel and is rarely performed. In this respect, it would be desirable to perform the detection of metallic objects and of radioactive radiation as a single step.
The present invention is a hand-held metal detector that addresses the problem of proposing a hand-held metal detector for scanning people that makes it possible to detect metallic materials and/or radioactive metallic and/or radioactive non-metallic materials, either collectively or individually.
In addition to a metal detection probe, the hand-held metal detector proposed by the invention also comprises at least one radiation detection probe. The radiation detection probe for detecting ionizing radiation is located in the vicinity of a ring, rod, or disk-shaped probe section serving to hold a detector coil of the metal detection probe, preferably next to a shaft for holding display and operating elements and/or metal detection electronics for the metal detection probe.
Together, the two probes make it possible to locate metallic objects and to detect radioactive radiation during a single non-contact scan. In order to check people, the hand-held metal detector—like known hand-held metal detectors—is passed at a close distance over the body of the person to be checked. Detected metallic and/or radioactive materials are signaled acoustically and/or visually to the security person. In order to detect radioactivity, it is possible in principle to use all types of known radiation detection probes for example Geiger tubes or scintillation detectors in conjunction with known radiation detection electronics. Of special interest are those with high sensitivity for radioactive radiation, e.g. alpha, beta, gamma, x-ray, or neutron radiation, so that the hand-held metal detector can also be used as a contamination detector for weakly radioactive traces. Due to their small size and high sensitivity, so-called scintillation detectors of the Csl or Na type, for example, are especially well suited for detecting alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Compared with Na scintillation detectors, Csl scintillation detectors have the advantage that they are not moisture-sensitive. However, such scintillation detectors are not suitable for detecting neutron radiation so that an additional special neutron detector must be provided.
Preferably, at least one radiation detection probe is installed in such a way relative to the plane spanned by the detector coil that its maximum sensitivity for ionizing radiation is perpendicular to the detector coil. As a result, the cone of highest sensitivity of both the metal detection probe and the radiation detection probe(s) points in the same direction, i.e. the usual scanning direction of hand-held metal detectors, so that the hand-held metal detector does not need to be specially oriented in order to detect radiation. As a consequence, the hand-held metal detector according to the invention can be manipulated in familiar fashion by the security personnel, thereby ensuring a reliable scanning process for detecting metallic and/or radioactive materials.
In another preferred embodiment of the hand-held metal detector proposed by the invention, the radiation detection probe formed by a Csl scintillation detector that is preferably integrated in the shaft at the transition point to the probe section. However, in principle, the radiation detection probe can also be installed in any other suitable location of the hand-held metal detector. It may extend completely outside the probe section of the metal detection probe, or may protrude into the same. This ensures that the hand of the security person guiding the hand-held metal detector during the scanning process does not cover the collection port of the radiation detection probe. In addition, this has the effect that during the scanning process the radiation detection probe passes as close to the body of the person to be checked as the metal detection probe so that radioactive materials are detected as reliably as metallic substances.
In addition, there are advantages if the radiation detection electronics for the detected radiation as well as a display element for the intensity of the radiation are disposed in the shaft designed as a handle. The radiation detection electronics may be used in addition to the metal detection electronics. However, it is also possible to provide a central electronic detection system for both. Especially well suited as display elements for radiation are LED chains or also a LCD display that represents the intensity of the radiation as a bar.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, detected materials trigger an acoustic and/or visual and/or haptic alarm, with the alarm signal varying in relation to the mass and/or distance and/or type of the material. For example, depending on the type of the signal, the alarm signal may differ by the brightness and/or blinking frequency of a light signal, the volume and/or by the frequency of a transmitted acoustic signal, or the intensity of a vibration signal.
It proved to be expedient to evaluate the measuring signals of the metal detection probe and of the radiation detection probe separately by means of the detection electronics, and to trigger the acoustic and/or visual and/or haptic alarm with a differentiated signaling system. Preferably, the acoustic, visual or haptic alarm changes its intensity with a proportional rise relative to the mass and/or distance and/or type of the detected substance.
In one embodiment of the invention, the metal detection probe and the radiation detection probe can be operated jointly or independent of each other.
Below, the invention is described in detail with reference to two embodiment examples shown in the drawing. Additional characteristics of the invention are explained in the following description of the embodiment examples of the invention in conjunction with the Claims and the attached drawing. In different implementations of the invention, the individual characteristics may be realized individually or in combinations of several.
The first embodiment example of the hand-held metal detector 1 proposed by the invention, shown in a top view in
The second embodiment example of the hand-held metal detector 1 proposed by the invention, shown also in a top view in
Although the invention has been shown and described with respect to certain embodiments, it is obvious that equivalents and modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon the reading and understanding of the specification. The present invention includes all such equivalents and modifications, and is limited only by the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2006 018 938.6 | Dec 2006 | DE | national |
07 018 683.8 | Sep 2007 | EP | regional |