Short-lived fission product-yield measurements from $^{\mathrm{238}}$U(n,f) at E$_{\mathrm{n}}=$4.6 MeV

ORAL

Abstract

There is currently an ongoing effort by the LLNL-LANL-TUNL collaboration to measure high quality fission product yield (FPY) data from neutron-induced fission on $^{\mathrm{235,238}}$U, and $^{\mathrm{239}}$Pu. The goal is to study the energy dependence of the fission products using monoenergetic and pulsed neutron beams at the TUNL tandem accelerator for incident energies between 0.5 and 15 MeV. Previous data have focused on long-lived cumulative FPYs with half lives of hours to days [1,2]. In order to provide consistent data of the FPY distributions, there is a need to extend the measurements to shorter-lived fission products. Hence, a rapid belt-driven irradiated target transfer system (RABITTS) was developed at TUNL to allow cyclic neutron activation on the actinide targets. This technique permits the measurement of fission products with half lives as short as a fraction of a second. An overview of the experimental procedure and data analysis, as well as preliminary results, using the recent $^{\mathrm{238}}$U(n,f) measurements at E$_{\mathrm{n}}=$4.6 MeV with the RABITTS will be presented. [1] M. Gooden et al., Nucl. Data Sheets 131, 319 (2016). [2] A. Tonchev et al., LLNL-CONF-788565-986272.

*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. DOE by LLNL under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.

Authors

  • Anthony Ramirez

    • LLNL
  • Chris Hagmann

    • LLNL
  • Jack Silano

    • LLNL
  • Mark Stoyer

    • LLNL
  • Anton Tonchev

    • LLNL
  • Matthew Gooden

    • LANL
  • Todd Bredeweg

    • LANL
  • David Vieira

    • LANL
  • Jerry Wilhelmy

    • LANL
  • Vanessa Linero

    • LANL
  • Sean Finch

    • Duke University/TUNL
  • Werner Tornow

    • Duke University/TUNL
  • Calvin Howell

    • Duke University/TUNL
  • FNU Krishichayan

    • Duke University/TUNL
  • Innocent Tsorxe

    • Duke University/TUNL