10 research outputs found
Excitation functions for (p,x) reactions of niobium in the energy range of E = 40-90 MeV
A stack of thin Nb foils was irradiated with the 100 MeV proton beam at Los
Alamos National Laboratory's Isotope Production Facility, to investigate the
Nb(p,4n)Mo nuclear reaction as a monitor for intermediate energy
proton experiments and to benchmark state-of-the-art reaction model codes. A
set of 38 measured cross sections for Nb(p,x) and
Cu(p,x) reactions between 40-90 MeV, as well as 5 independent
measurements of isomer branching ratios, are reported. These are useful in
medical and basic science radionuclide productions at intermediate energies.
The Cu(p,x)Co, Cu(p,x)Zn, and
Cu(p,x)Zn reactions were used to determine proton
fluence, and all activities were quantified using HPGe spectrometry. Variance
minimization techniques were employed to reduce systematic uncertainties in
proton energy and fluence, improving the reliability of these measurements. The
measured cross sections are shown to be in excellent agreement with literature
values, and have been measured with improved precision compared with previous
measurements. This work also reports the first measurement of the
Nb(p,x)Rb reaction, and of the independent cross
sections for Cu(p,x)Mn and
Nb(p,x)Y in the 40-90 MeV region. The effects of
Si(p,x)Na contamination, arising from silicone
adhesive in the Kapton tape used to encapsulate the aluminum monitor foils, is
also discussed as a cautionary note to future stacked-target cross section
measurements. \emph{A priori} predictions of the reaction modeling codes CoH,
EMPIRE, and TALYS are compared with experimentally measured values and used to
explore the differences between codes for the Nb(p,x) and
Cu(p,x) reactions.Comment: 34 pages, submitted to NIM-
Investigating High-Energy Proton-Induced Reactions on Spherical Nuclei: Implications for the Pre-Equilibrium Exciton Model
A number of accelerator-based isotope production facilities utilize 100- to
200-MeV proton beams due to the high production rates enabled by high-intensity
beam capabilities and the greater diversity of isotope production brought on by
the long range of high-energy protons. However, nuclear reaction modeling at
these energies can be challenging because of the interplay between different
reaction modes and a lack of existing guiding cross section data. A Tri-lab
collaboration has been formed among the Lawrence Berkeley, Los Alamos, and
Brookhaven National Laboratories to address these complexities by
characterizing charged-particle nuclear reactions relevant to the production of
established and novel radioisotopes. In the inaugural collaboration
experiments, stacked-targets of niobium foils were irradiated at the Brookhaven
Linac Isotope Producer (E=200 MeV) and the Los Alamos Isotope Production
Facility (E=100 MeV) to measure Nb(p,x) cross sections between 50
and 200 MeV. The measured cross-section results were compared with literature
data as well as the default calculations of the nuclear model codes TALYS, CoH,
EMPIRE, and ALICE. We developed a standardized procedure that determines the
reaction model parameters that best reproduce the most prominent reaction
channels in a physically justifiable manner. The primary focus of the procedure
was to determine the best parametrization for the pre-equilibrium two-component
exciton model. This modeling study revealed a trend toward a relative decrease
for internal transition rates at intermediate proton energies (E=20-60 MeV)
in the current exciton model as compared to the default values. The results of
this work are instrumental for the planning, execution, and analysis essential
to isotope production.Comment: 37 pages, 62 figures. Revised version, published in Physical Review
Comprehensive study of the reactions induced by 12C on 103Rh up to 33 MeV/nucleon
Abstract Fifty-three excitation functions for the production of radioactive residues in the interaction of 12C with 103Rh have been measured from the Coulomb barrier up to 400 MeV by means of the activation technique. These excitation functions have been analyzed considering complete fusion, incomplete fusion of 8Be and α-particle fragments and, above about 200 MeV, the transfer of either one proton or one neutron from 12C to 103Rh. The emission of pre-equilibrium particles during the thermalization of the excited composite nuclei formed in all these processes and, in the case of 8Be and α incomplete fusion, also the re-emission of α-particles after a mean-field interaction or a few interactions with the target nucleons have been taken into account
Considerations concerning targetry for radioisotope production at the NAC and the production of gallium-67, indium-111 and cadmium-109
Thesis (Ph. D.) -- University of Stellenbosch, 1990.One copy microfiche.Full text to be digitised and attached to bibliographic record
Measurement and modeling of proton-induced reactions on arsenic from 35 to 200 MeV
As72 is a promising positron emitter for diagnostic imaging that can be employed locally using a Se72 generator. However, current reaction pathways to Se72 have insufficient nuclear data for efficient production using regional 100-200 MeV high-intensity proton accelerators. In order to address this deficiency, stacked-target irradiations were performed at LBNL, LANL, and BNL to measure the production of the Se72/As72 positron emission tomography (PET) generator system via As75(p,x) between 35 and 200 MeV. This work provides the most well-characterized excitation function for As75(p,4n)Se72 starting from threshold. Additional focus was given to report the first measurements of As75(p,x)Ge68 and bolster an already robust production capability for the highly valuable Ge68/Ga68 PET generator. Thick target yield comparisons with prior established formation routes to both generators are made. In total, high-energy proton-induced cross sections are reported for 55 measured residual products from As75, Cunat, and Tinat targets, where the latter two materials were present as monitor foils. These results were compared with literature data as well as the default theoretical calculations of the nuclear model codes talys, coh, empire, and alice. Reaction modeling at these energies is typically unsatisfactory due to few prior published data and many interacting physics models. Therefore, a detailed assessment of the talys code was performed with simultaneous parameter adjustments applied according to a standardized procedure. Particular attention was paid to the formulation of the two-component exciton model in the transition between the compound and preequilibrium regions, with a linked investigation of level density models for nuclei off of stability and their impact on modeling predictive power. This paper merges experimental work and evaluation techniques for high-energy charged-particle isotope production in an extension to an earlier study of this kind