Characterization of the 12C(p,p')12C Reaction (Ep=19.5-30 MeV) for Active Interrogation
Abstract
Passive detection of special nuclear material (SNM) is challenging due to its inherently low rate of spontaneous emission of penetrating radiation, the relative ease of shielding, and the fluctuating and frequently overwhelming background. Active interrogation (AI), the use of external radiation to increase the emission rate of characteristic radiation from SNM, has long been considered to be a promising method to overcome those challenges. Current AI systems that incorporate radiography tend to use bremsstrahlung beams, which can deliver high radiation doses. Low-energy ion-driven nuclear reactions that produce multiple monoenergetic photons may be used as an alternative. The 12C(p,p')12C is one such reaction that could produce large gamma-ray yields of highly penetrating 4.4- and 15.1-MeV gamma rays. This reaction does not directly produce neutrons below the 19.7-MeV threshold, and the 15.1-MeV gamma-ray line is well matched to the photofission cross-section of 235U and 238U. We report the measurements of thick-target gamma-ray yields at 4.4 and 15.1 MeV from the 12C(p,p')12C at proton energies of 19.5, 25, and 30 MeV. Measurements were made with two 3'' EJ309 cylindrical liquid scintillation detectors and thermoluminescent dosimeters placed at 0 and 90 degrees. We estimate the highest yields of the 4.4- and 15.1-MeV gamma rays of 1.65×1010 sr-1μ C-1 and 4.47×108 sr-1μ C-1 at a proton energy of 30 MeV, respectively. The yield of 4.4 and 15.1 MeV gamma rays in all experimental configurations is greater than a comparable deuteron-driven reaction that produces the same gamma-ray energies- 11B(d,nγ)12C. However, a two orders of magnitude increase of the neutron radiation dose is observed when the proton energy increases from 19.5 to 30 MeV.
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