76 research outputs found
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High-Yield D-T Neutron Generator
A high-yield D-T neutron generator has been developed for neutron interrogation in homeland security applications such as cargo screening. The generator has been designed as a sealed tube with a performance goal of producing 5 {center_dot} 10{sup 11} n/s over a long lifetime. The key generator components developed are a radio-frequency (RF) driven ion source and a beam-loaded neutron production target that can handle a beam power of 10 kW. The ion source can provide a 100 mA D{sup +}/T{sup +} beam current with a high fraction of atomic species and can be pulsed up to frequencies of several kHz for pulsed neutron generator operation. Testing in D-D operation has been started
Irradiation of Materials with Short, Intense Ion pulses at NDCX-II
We present an overview of the performance of the Neutralized Drift
Compression Experiment-II (NDCX-II) accelerator at Berkeley Lab, and report on
recent target experiments on beam driven melting and transmission ion energy
loss measurements with nanosecond and millimeter-scale ion beam pulses and thin
tin foils. Bunches with around 10^11 ions, 1-mm radius, and 2-30 ns FWHM
duration have been created with corresponding fluences in the range of 0.1 to
0.7 J/cm^2. To achieve these short pulse durations and mm-scale focal spot
radii, the 1.1 MeV He+ ion beam is neutralized in a drift compression section,
which removes the space charge defocusing effect during final compression and
focusing. The beam space charge and drift compression techniques resemble
necessary beam conditions and manipulations in heavy ion inertial fusion
accelerators. Quantitative comparison of detailed particle-in-cell simulations
with the experiment play an important role in optimizing accelerator
performance.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures. revised manuscript submitted to Laser and
Particle Beam
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A Sixteen Channel Peak Sensing ADC for Singles Spectra in the FERA Format
To read out multi-element small X-ray detectors for X-ray fluorescence application with synchrotron radiation one needs the capability to record multiple singles spectra for each detector element at high rates. We have developed a sixteen channel 11 bit peak sensing ADC in a CAMAC module. We use the FERA readout bus to place the data into a commercially available histogramming module developed to generate multiple histograms from FERA ADCs. The sixteen channels digitize shaped pulses from the detectors without external gating. The digitizing time is 8 {mu}sec, the peak acquisition time is {>=} 2 {mu}sec. The module contains a LiFO to permit block transfers in order to minimize dead times associated with the readout. There is a common CAMAC controlled analog threshold for noise suppression and a 16 bit mask to enable or disable individual ADCs. Differential non-linearity is less than +8% / -4%. A {gamma}-ray spectrum collected using this ADC is presented
Design and Implementation of a Thomson Parabola for Fluence Dependent Energy-Loss Measurements at the Neutralized Drift Compression eXperiment
The interaction of ion beams with matter includes the investigation of the
basic principles of ion stopping in heated materials. An unsolved question is
the effect of different, especially higher, ion beam fluences on ion stopping
in solid targets. This is relevant in applications such as in fusion sciences.
To address this question, a Thomson parabola was built for the Neutralized
Drift Compression eXperiment (NDCX-II) for ion energy-loss measurements at
different ion beam fluences. The linear induction accelerator NDCX-II delivers
2 ns short, intense ion pulses, up to several tens of nC/pulse, or
10-10 ions, with a peak kinetic energy of ~1.1 MeV and a minimal
spot size of 2 mm FWHM. For this particular accelerator the energy
determination with conventional beam diagnostics, for example, time of flight
measurements, is imprecise due to the non-trivial longitudinal phase space of
the beam. In contrast, a Thomson parabola is well suited to reliably determine
the beam energy distribution. The Thomson parabola differentiates charged
particles by energy and charge-to-mass ratio, through deflection of charged
particles by electric and magnetic fields. During first proof-of-principle
experiments, we achieved to reproduce the average initial helium beam energy as
predicted by computer simulations with a deviation of only 1.4 %. Successful
energy-loss measurements with 1 {\mu}m thick Silicon Nitride foils show the
suitability of the accelerator for such experiments. The initial ion energy was
determined during a primary measurement without a target, while a second
measurement, incorporating the target, was used to determine the transmitted
energy. The energy-loss was then determined as the difference between the two
energies
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Two particle correlations from relativistic nuclear collisions
Two particle correlations at low relative momentum have been examined using the Plastic Ball detector for the system 400 MeV/nucleon Ca + Ca. The unbound /sup 5/Li ground state yield has been extracted from the p-/sup 4/He correlation and compared with a Chemical Equilibrium model along with the yield of light bound clusters. Source-size radii were measured for both Ca + Ca and Nb + Nb, at 400 MeV/nucleon from p-p correlations. The radii were found to have a cube-root dependence on the proton multiplicity of the event and the deduced thermal freezeout density was found to be about 25% of normal nuclear matter density. 15 references, 8 figures
Comparative Analysis of the Mechanisms of Fast Light Particle Formation in Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions at Low and Intermediate Energies
The dynamics and the mechanisms of preequilibrium-light-particle formation in
nucleus-nucleus collisions at low and intermediate energies are studied on the
basis of a classical four-body model. The angular and energy distributions of
light particles from such processes are calculated. It is found that, at
energies below 50 MeV per nucleon, the hardest section of the energy spectrum
is formed owing to the acceleration of light particles from the target by the
mean field of the projectile nucleus. Good agreement with available
experimental data is obtained.Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures, LaTeX, published in Physics of Atomic Nuclei
v.65, No. 8, 2002, pp. 1459 - 1473 translated from Yadernaya Fizika v. 65,
No. 8, 2002, pp. 1494 - 150
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Initial Experimental Verification of the Neutron Beam Modeling for the LBNL BNCT Facility
In preparation for future clinical BNCT trials, neutron production via the 7Li(p,n) reaction as well as subsequent moderation to produce epithermal neutrons have been studied. Proper design of a moderator and filter assembly is crucial in producing an optimal epithermal neutron spectrum for brain tumor treatments. Based on in-phantom figures-of-merit,desirable assemblies have been identified. Experiments were performed at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's 88-inch cyclotron to characterize epithermal neutron beams created using several microampere of 2.5 MeV protons on a lithium target. The neutron moderating assembly consisted of Al/AlF3 and Teflon, with a lead reflector to produce an epithermal spectrum strongly peaked at 10-20 keV. The thermal neutron fluence was measured as a function of depth in a cubic lucite head phantom by neutron activation in gold foils. Portions of the neutron spectrum were measured by in-air activation of six cadmium-covered materials (Au, Mn, In, Cu, Co, W) with high epithermal neutron absorption resonances. The results are reasonably reproduced in Monte Carlo computational models, confirming their validity
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Accelerator-Driven Neutron Source for Cargo Screening
Advanced neutron interrogation systems for the screening ofsea-land cargo containers for shielded special nuclear materials (SNM)require a high-yield neutron source to achieve the desired detectionprobability, false alarm rate, and throughput. An accelerator-drivenneutron source is described that produces a forward directed beam ofhigh-energy (up to 8.5 MeV) neutrons utilizing the D(d,n)3He reaction atdeuteron beam energies of up to 6 MeV. The key components of the neutronsource are a high-current RFQ accelerator and an innovative neutronproduction target. A microwave-driven deuteron source is coupled to anelectrostatic LEBT that injects a 40 mA D+-beam into a 6 MeV, 5.1meter-long, 200 MHz RFQ. The RFQ is based on an unusual beam dynamicsdesign and is capable of operating at a duty factor that produces morethan 1.2 mA timeaverage beam current. The beam is transported to a2-atmosphere deuterium gas target with a specially-designed, thinentrance window. A high-frequency dipole magnet is used to spread thebeam over the long dimension of the 4 by 35 cm target window. The sourcewill be capable of delivering a neutron flux of ~;2 x 107 n/(cm2 x s) tothe center of a sea-land cargo container and is expected t o satisfy therequirements for full testing and demonstration of advanced neutroninterrogation techniques based on stimulated SNM signatures
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