Dear all,
Our relatively new JEOL-8230 (installed April 2019) has shown some "early sign of ageing" (

) just after 2-3 years... Whereas I got quite stable PHA bias value (at constant gain) on my P-10 counters, I realise quickly that the bias was strongly shifting in the course of just 1-2 years on PET monochromator especially. The effect is also visible on LiF (to some extend) so this suggest a counter problem, not a monochromator problem). The strange evolution of the bias / gain depict below occurred simultaneously on my two Xe counters (one is a L-type spectrometer, the other an H-type, both with PET + LiF).
At first, my optima for the two Xe counters on PET were at a gain of 16 to reach around 1700 V for a pulse at 4 V. Now, after 2 years, I have to use a gain of 32 (or 64 for lower X-ray energy lines beyond 140 mm spectrometer position). Same on the LiF, now my optimum bias is only achievable with a higher gain.
John D. suggested me that Xe-counter should be replaced every 3-5 years... But seeing that much change in just 2 years surprises me, and I didn't recall having seen this behavior on my other 8230 that was installed in Colorado. I cannot pinpoint the exact time I opt for higher bias on my newest probe, but it was in spring / summer last year, so definitely 2 years after installation.
Is this just a normal and unavoidable behaviour (i.e., loosing Xe-gas => need to increase the gain to get optimum bias around 1700 V)? Does anyone have any experience with that? My local (German) engineer has no idea why it occurs but they have seen it on other instruments...
Julien Allaz