TY - JOUR
T1 - Discriminating Uranium Isotopes Using the Time-Emission Profiles of Long-Lived Delayed Neutrons
AU - Nattress, J.
AU - Ogren, K.
AU - Foster, A.
AU - Meddeb, A.
AU - Ounaies, Z.
AU - Jovanovic, I.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Physical Society.
PY - 2018/8/30
Y1 - 2018/8/30
N2 - In nuclear nonproliferation and safeguards, detecting and accurately characterizing special nuclear material remains one of the greatest challenges. Uranium enrichment determination is typically achieved by measuring the ratio of characteristic γ-ray emissions from U235 and U238. Fission also produces β-delayed neutrons, which have been used in the past to determine uranium enrichment from the time dependence of the long-lived delayed-neutron emission rate. Such measurements typically use moderated He3-tube detectors. We demonstrate an alternative measurement technique that employs a fast neutron active-interrogation probe and a scintillation detector to measure the enrichment of uranium using both the buildup and decay of β-delayed-neutron emission. Instead of He3 tubes, a capture-based heterogeneous composite detector consisting of scintillating Li glass and polyvinyl toluene is constructed and used, offering a prospect to scale delayed-neutron measurements to larger detector sizes. Since the technique relies on the existing tabulated nuclear data, no calibration standards are required. It is shown that the buildup of delayed-neutron emission can be used to distinguish between uranium samples and infer the uranium enrichment level, with accuracy that rivals the method that employs the time-dependent decay of delayed-neutron emission.
AB - In nuclear nonproliferation and safeguards, detecting and accurately characterizing special nuclear material remains one of the greatest challenges. Uranium enrichment determination is typically achieved by measuring the ratio of characteristic γ-ray emissions from U235 and U238. Fission also produces β-delayed neutrons, which have been used in the past to determine uranium enrichment from the time dependence of the long-lived delayed-neutron emission rate. Such measurements typically use moderated He3-tube detectors. We demonstrate an alternative measurement technique that employs a fast neutron active-interrogation probe and a scintillation detector to measure the enrichment of uranium using both the buildup and decay of β-delayed-neutron emission. Instead of He3 tubes, a capture-based heterogeneous composite detector consisting of scintillating Li glass and polyvinyl toluene is constructed and used, offering a prospect to scale delayed-neutron measurements to larger detector sizes. Since the technique relies on the existing tabulated nuclear data, no calibration standards are required. It is shown that the buildup of delayed-neutron emission can be used to distinguish between uranium samples and infer the uranium enrichment level, with accuracy that rivals the method that employs the time-dependent decay of delayed-neutron emission.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.10.024049
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevApplied.10.024049
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85053130562
SN - 2331-7019
VL - 10
JO - Physical Review Applied
JF - Physical Review Applied
IS - 2
M1 - 024049
ER -