1 / 18

UCN Source at the NCSU PULSTAR Reactor

UCN Source at the NCSU PULSTAR Reactor. Bernard Wehring and Albert Young North Carolina State University International Workshop on Neutron-Antineutron Transition Search with Ultra Cold Neutrons 13-14 September 2002 Bloomington, Indiana. Outline. NCSU PULSTAR Reactor Desirable Attributes

jorryn
Télécharger la présentation

UCN Source at the NCSU PULSTAR Reactor

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. UCN Source at theNCSU PULSTAR Reactor Bernard Wehring and Albert Young North Carolina State University International Workshop on Neutron-Antineutron Transition Search with Ultra Cold Neutrons 13-14 September 2002 Bloomington, Indiana

  2. Outline • NCSU PULSTAR Reactor • Desirable Attributes • NCSU UCN Source • Conceptual Designs • Conclusion

  3. NCSU PULSTAR Reactor

  4. NCSU PULSTAR Core • 5 x 5 array of fuel assemblies • 5 x 5 array of pins • Sintered UO2 pellets • 4% enriched • 1-MW power • Graphite, Be reflected • Light water moderated and cooled

  5. Desirable Attributes • Properties • Heavy loading of U-235 -- 12.5 kg • Low ratio of H to U-235 atoms • High ratio of fast to thermal flux in the core • Benefits • High fast-flux leakage • High sensitivity to reflector material • Long core lifetime

  6. PULSTAR Flux

  7. 1-MW TRIGA Mark II • U-ZrH fuel • 19.7% enrichment • 3.5 kg U-235 mass • ~ 64 liter core volume • 1013 n/cm2s core avg thermal flux • 6.4 x 1012 n/cm2s core avg. fast flux Thermal flux

  8. UCN Source at PULSTAR • Parametric design calculations • CN fluxes in the UCN converter and heating rates by MCNP simulations of the PULSTAR reactor, CN source, and UCN converter. • UCN production rates by integrating the converter CN energy spectrum with the UCN production cross sections. • UCN intensity at end of an open UCN guide using lumped-parameter and UCN-transport calculations.

  9. NCSU UCN Source Details • UCN Converter • Solid ortho D2 • 4-cm thick • 18-cm diameter • CN Source • Solid methane • 1-cm thick • Cup shape around UCN converter

  10. Conceptual Design I(top view)

  11. CN Flux (MCNP) • Averaged over UCN converter • Integrated, 0 to 10 meV CN energies φ = 1.0 x 1012 CN/cm2-s

  12. Neutron and Gamma Heating Rates (MCNP) • UCN converter, 86 g 0.7 W • UCN converter chamber, 484 g 2.1 W • CN source, 408 g 4.0 W • CN source chamber, 1164 g 4.4 W

  13. UCN Production Rate • P = N<σ>φ V • <σ> = <σsingle> + <σmulti> • <σsingle> = 5 x 10-7 b/D • <σmulti> = 1 x 10-7 b/D • V = 1000 cc P = 3.6 x 107 UCN/s

  14. UCN Intensity at End of Open Ni-58 Guide • Io = f P • f = absorption leak / (absorption + leak) • absorption = 50 ms • leak = 4 V / (S<v>) = 4 t /<v> = 32 ms • f = 0.6 • Io = 2.2 x 107 UCN/s

  15. Conceptual Design II(side view) • CN flux averaged over UCN converter • 4-cm thick x 18-cm diameter φ = 1.0 x 1012 CN/cm2-s • UCN intensity at end of open Ni-58 guide • 50-cm rise, 2-m level Io = 1.2 x 107 UCN/s

  16. Conceptual Design III(side view) • CN flux averaged over UCN converter • 4-cm thick x 18-cm diameter φ = 1.2 x 1012 CN/cm2-s • UCN intensity at end of open Ni-58 guide • 50-cm rise, 2-m level Io = 1.5 x 107 UCN/s

  17. N-N Bar Experiment

  18. Conclusion • UCN intensity at bottle entrance (2 MW) Io = 3 x 107 UCN/s • Bottle equivalent radius, R = 150 cm • Avg. chord length, L = 4/3 x R = 200 cm • L / (avg. UCN speed), t = 0.5 s • Bottle lifetime,  = 300 s • Discovery potential, coherent free path > 2L > Io x (/2t) x (2t)2 = 9 x 109 s (> 6 ILL)

More Related