Skip to content

The PiGI is built as a ready-to-go drop-in module for the Raspberry Pi to transform it into a versatile geiger counter to measure/monitor radioactivity. It will generate the required high voltage the counting tubes need to operate and it will safely invert the counting impulses to a falling edge, detectable by a GPIO Pin on the PI. But it's also…

apollo-ng/PiGI

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

PiGI - A Raspberry Pi Geiger-Mueller Interface

Image

The PiGI is built as a ready-to-go drop-in module for the Raspberry Pi to transform it into a versatile geiger counter to measure/monitor radioactivity. It will generate the required high voltage the counting tubes need to operate and it will safely invert the counting impulses to a falling edge, detectable by a GPIO Pin on the PI. But it's also designed in such a universal way in order to be very hackable. Basically it can be connected to any processing system that can detect falling edges like:

  • Arduino
  • ATMega
  • PIC
  • Other embedded Linux ARM/MIPS systems with GPIO Inputs (GNUBLIN, Netus G20 etc.)

Specifications

  • 40x43mm board
  • Very low energy consumption (<2mA @ 0.09uSv/h local dose rate)
  • Cathode counting
  • Low BOM count / small footprint
  • Very cheap design: Prototype costs per board -> EUR15 / High Volume Production < 10 EUR
  • Dual stackable for low/high dosis counting with 2 tubes
  • Open-Source Hardware/Software

Hardware

  • Schematics
  • Board designs
  • Released under CERN OHL 1.2

Image

Software

Features

  • Live Status
  • Live (15min/60min/24h) Graphs
  • Analog gauge
  • Ion Trace Visualizer
  • History
  • Tick Simulator (For show and development)
  • Hardware RNG entropy generator
  • More to come
  • Released under GPL V3

Screenshots

Main instrument panel

Image

History instrument panel

Image

Ion trace visualizer

Image

Website & Contact

https://apollo.open-resource.org/lab:pigi

About

The PiGI is built as a ready-to-go drop-in module for the Raspberry Pi to transform it into a versatile geiger counter to measure/monitor radioactivity. It will generate the required high voltage the counting tubes need to operate and it will safely invert the counting impulses to a falling edge, detectable by a GPIO Pin on the PI. But it's also…

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published