4.7 Article

A novel experimental approach to characterize neutron fields at high- and low-energy particle accelerators

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-21113-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) [CRSII5_180352, 200021_175749]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [200021_175749] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Characterization of particle accelerator induced neutron fields is crucial for various research and industrial applications. This study presents a novel approach to experimentally characterize neutron spectra in complex accelerator environments, and demonstrates its effectiveness. The findings have significant implications for decommissioning of nuclear facilities and production of controlled neutron beams.
The characterization of particle accelerator induced neutron fields is challenging but fundamental for research and industrial activities, including radiation protection, neutron metrology, developments of neutron detectors for nuclear and high-energy physics, decommissioning of nuclear facilities, and studies of neutron damage on materials and electronic components. This work reports on the study of a novel approach to the experimental characterization of neutron spectra at two complex accelerator environments, namely the CERF, a high-energy mixed reference field at CERN in Geneva, and the Bern medical cyclotron laboratory, a facility used for multi-disciplinary research activities, and for commercial radioisotope production for nuclear medicine. Measurements were performed through an innovative active neutron spectrometer called DIAMON, a device developed to provide in real time neutron energy spectra without the need of guess distributions. The intercomparison of DIAMON measurements with reference data, Monte Carlo simulations, and with the well-established neutron monitor Berthold LB 6411, has been found to be highly satisfactory in all conditions. It was demonstrated that DIAMON is an almost unique device able to characterize neutron fields induced by hadrons at 120 GeV/c as well as by protons at 18 MeV colliding with different materials. The accurate measurement of neutron spectra at medical cyclotrons during routine radionuclide production for nuclear medicine applications is of paramount importance for the facility decommissioning. The findings of this work are the basis for establishing a methodology for producing controlled proton-induced neutron beams with medical cyclotrons.

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