1 / 30

Simulations on “Energy plus Transmutation” setup, 1.5 GeV

Simulations on “Energy plus Transmutation” setup, 1.5 GeV. Mitja Majerle, V Wagner, A Kr ása, F Křížek majerle@ujf.cas.cz. This document can be downloaded in form of report at : http://ojs.ujf.cas.cz/~mitja/articles/ept.pdf. What was studied ?. INFLUENCE OF

joy-nolan
Download Presentation

Simulations on “Energy plus Transmutation” setup, 1.5 GeV

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Simulations on “Energy plus Transmutation”setup, 1.5 GeV Mitja Majerle, V Wagner, A Krása, F Křížek majerle@ujf.cas.cz This document can be downloaded in form of report at : http://ojs.ujf.cas.cz/~mitja/articles/ept.pdf

  2. What was studied ? • INFLUENCE OF • simplifications of the setup description • different parts of the setup • beam geometry • inserted detectors • reactions with protons • intra-nuclear cascade model used in calculations • PARAMETERS OF THE SETUP • the number of produced neutrons (spallation, fission, ..) • k (criticality) • heat production ...

  3. Code, setup parameters • MCNPX 2.4.0 • plots, photos of the setup will follow • estimation of some parameters (aluminum shielding, density of polyethylene, dimensions and material of holders, wooden plates, nuclear structure, ..) • position of detectors (input data !)

  4. Control detectors for studying the setup - with (n,g) we study LE neutrons (flat part) – odd numbers -(n,4n) threshold is 23 MeV – even numbers

  5. The simplifications of the blanket • No influence on high energy neutrons (even numbers) • Box has no influence on HE neutrons ! • Box blurs differences. • 40%, 10%

  6. Polyethylene, Cd layer • Last winter V Wagner presented these spectra. • The spectra were taken inside the 1st and 3rd gap. • No influence on HE neutrons. absorption done by238U resonance capture

  7. Aluminum and iron holders, upper iron plate • Two simulations with and without Al, Fe components. The results do not differ outside the limits of statistical error - (HE 3%, LE 10%) • The upper iron plate reduces the number of neutrons for 2%.

  8. The wooden plate • Wooden plate under the target(1+2cm,0.5kg/l). • Without box. • Detectors from top to bottom. • Asymmetry 5% => negligible wood influence.

  9. Beam parameters influence • Beam profile is approximated with Gaussian distribution (good only near the beam center !). • We must always count with beam displacement. • Experimentally determined beam profiles and displacement (V Wagner using monitor and track detector data – for profile mainly I Zhuk data):

  10. Beam profile • Simulations with 3mm, 3cm homogenous beams and with a beam with gaussian profile (FWMH=3cm). • Differences only for few percents. • Not important.

  11. Beam displacement • Beam displaced for 3,5,8, and 10 mm. • Differences between results up to tens of %Displacement must be measured as accurately as possible !

  12. Beam hits uranium • Badly focused beam also hits uranium blanket. • The influence of few percents of beam hitting uranium was not seen in simulations. • Gaussian distribution is not valid for the tails and in reality we don’t know how much big is this influence.

  13. The influence of protons • Activation detectors could also be activated by protons. • Cross-sections for reactions with protons are not included in MCNPX. • Estimations from Phasotron experiment and neutron/proton ratio : in gaps, near the central axis ca. 10% of activation is due to protons.

  14. The influence of detectors on neutron field • Metal plate on top reduces the number of neutrons only for 2%. Our detectors are much smaller. • Golden strap (2mm, 4mm) in the first gap has no influence on detectors in other gaps. • Only 0.1 mm thick golden strap is an obstacle for thermal neutrons : it can reduce the production rates of reactions with thermal neutrons inside the same gap for 20%.

  15. The influence of plastic foils for detectors on neutron field • The 4mm and 8mmpolyethylene on which were placed the detectors for 1.5 GeV experiments had effect on LE neutrons. • Au in sandwich of 2 Bi foils => no influence.

  16. Intra-Nuclear Cascade models • In MCNPX are 3 models (above 150 MeV): • Bertini • CEM • Isabel • The differences are up to 50% (standard, our detectors).

  17. Experimentally we cannot measure these. For 1.5 GeV experiment, neutron production : 29 in nuc. Interactions 8 in (n,xn) 14 prompt fission. Together 54 neutrons per 1 proton. Without box 49 neutrons, box reflects back 10% of them. KCODE calculations for criticality : k=19.2% k was calculated also by S.R. Hashemi-Nezhad - 22%. If we add polyethylene wall at the back, k stays the same. Neutrons per proton, criticality,..

  18. Comparison with experiment • The Greek group measures the ratios of neutrons inside and outside the box. • Calculated results do not agree with experiment.

  19. Density of polyethylene ?

  20. Group from Poland • No comparison with experiment yet. • Cross-sections only for 2 reactions (+2 stable isotopes). • Y detectors at places :

  21. Group from Řež • 4 detector types • A lot of cross-section libraries • Trends in ratios experiment/simulation are seen • 3 GeV experiment would confirm these trends

  22. Comparison between experiment and simulations 194Au 196Au Longitudinal distribution Radial distribution

  23. 6 MeV 8 MeV 11 MeV 23 MeV 23 Mev 23 MeV 23 MeV 11 MeV 8 MeV 6 MeV Experiment: Ep = 1.5 GeV 0.7 GeV, 1.0 GeV - the similar shape of radial distribution for experiment and simulation 1.5 GeV-different shape of radial distribution for experiment and simulation Cleardependenceon reaction energy threshold ↔on the neutron energy ratios normalized on first foil Longitudinal distribution – small differences, maybe done by not included protons Radial distribution– big differences, description is worse for neutrons with higher energy

  24. Radial distribution for 0.7 GeV and 1.0 GeV Conclusions: • Very small differences of shape • Maybe increase with energy? Necessary systematic of experiments with different beam energy Dependence of EXP/SIM ratios for first radial foil on beam energy Very important: 1) To analyze 2 GeV experiment 2) To make 3 GeV experiment

More Related