4.7 Article

Active neutron and gamma-ray imaging of highly enriched uranium for treaty verification

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-08253-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Energy National Nuclear Security Administration through Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation (DNN) [DE-FOA-0000568]
  2. Consortium for Verification Technology [DE-NA0002534]
  3. University of Michigan/Sandia National Laboratories Excellence in Engineering Fellowship
  4. Laboratory Directed Research Development (LDRD) Program at Sandia National Laboratories [17-0884]
  5. Department of Energy, Nuclear Energy University Program [DE-NE0000324]
  6. Department of Energy's Nuclear Criticality Safety program
  7. National Nuclear Security Administration's Office of the Chief of Defense Nuclear Safety [NA-511]

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The detection and characterization of highly enriched uranium (HEU) presents a large challenge in the non-proliferation field. HEU has a low neutron emission rate and most gamma rays are low energy and easily shielded. To address this challenge, an instrument known as the dual-particle imager (DPI) was used with a portable deuterium-tritium (DT) neutron generator to detect neutrons and gamma rays from induced fission in HEU. We evaluated system response using a 13.7-kg HEU sphere in several configurations with no moderation, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) moderation, and tungsten moderation. A hollow tungsten sphere was interrogated to evaluate the response to a possible hoax item. First, localization capabilities were demonstrated by reconstructing neutron and gamma-ray images. Once localized, additional properties such as fast neutron energy spectra and time-dependent neutron count rates were attributed to the items. For the interrogated configurations containing HEU, the reconstructed neutron spectra resembled Watt spectra, which gave confidence that the interrogated items were undergoing induced fission. The time-dependent neutron count rate was also compared for each configuration and shown to be dependent on the neutron multiplication of the item. This result showed that the DPI is a viable tool for localizing and confirming fissile mass and multiplication.

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