Abstract
In the field of gamma-ray spectroscopy with high-purity germanium detectors, used to measure the activity when the sample to be measured has low radioactivity, volumetric sources are widely used. To determine the sample activity, the full-energy peak efficiency is needed. Bulk sources are very common for low-level radioactivity measurements in activation analysis and environmental samples. The main problem with these measurements is that coincidence effects are large for close source-detector geometries. Ignoring these effects can lead to an error typically of a factor of 2 in the determination of Co-60 and Y-88 activity, which was used in this work in the calibration process. Extensive experimental readings have been carried out, and bulk gamma aqueous sources containing several radionuclides covering the energy range from 60 to 1,840 keV were used. By comparison, the experimental (present work) and theoretical (published) full-energy peak efficiency values are in good agreement; the overall percentage error is less than 6%.